Title: In re Vicks

State: california

Issuer: California Supreme Court

Document:

Filed 3/4/13 
 
 
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA 
 
 
 
In re MICHAEL D. VICKS 
) 
 
 
) 
              on Habeas Corpus. 
) 
S194129 
 
 
) 
 
 
) 
Ct.App. 4/1 D056998 
 
) 
 
 
) 
San Diego County 
 
 
) 
Super. Ct. No. CR63419 
 
____________________________________) 
 
In 2008, California voters approved Proposition 9, the Victims‟ Bill of 
Rights Act of 2008:  Marsy‟s Law.  The changes enacted by Marsy‟s Law became 
effective immediately; pertinent here are the amendments to Penal Code1 section 
3041.5 that increase the period of time between parole hearings but allow for the 
advancement of a hearing if a change in circumstances or new information 
subsequently establishes that there is a reasonable probability the prisoner is 
suitable for parole.  Petitioner Michael D. Vicks (Vicks) contends that application 
of these new parole procedures to prisoners who committed their crimes prior to 
the enactment of Marsy‟s Law violates the ex post facto clauses of the federal and 
state Constitutions.  (U.S. Const., art. I, § 10, cl. 1; Cal. Const., art. I, § 9.)  He 
challenges the amendments both on their face and as applied to him.  For the 
reasons set forth below, we reject both of his challenges. 
                                              
1  
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise 
noted. 
2 
I.  FACTS 
A.  The Underlying Crimes 
In 1983, Vicks was convicted of numerous violent felonies and sentenced 
to life in prison with the possibility of parole, consecutive to a determinate term of 
37 years eight months.2  According to the appellate opinion affirming the 
judgment, which the Board of Parole Hearings (Board) referenced during the 
parole hearing, Vicks and his accomplice engaged in two crime sprees in April 
1983.  They confronted their first victim as she was putting groceries into her car 
in a parking lot.  Vicks drove the victim‟s car, with the victim inside, to a second 
parking lot where he blocked a parked car.  Vicks‟s accomplice put a gun to the 
side of one of two women who were entering the parked car and took both 
women‟s purses.  The accomplice then drove the first victim‟s car to a third 
parking lot and blocked another parked car.  Vicks got out, pointed a gun at the 
driver of the parked car, and demanded his wallet and money.  Vicks then 
approached the passengers, a woman and her six-year-old son, put a gun to the 
woman‟s ribs, and ordered her into the first victim‟s car.  The woman pushed her 
son into her own car and got into the first victim‟s car.  After driving for a few 
minutes, the accomplice stopped the car.  The two women, whose heads were 
                                              
2  
Petitioner was convicted of one count of kidnapping for purposes of 
robbery while personally using a firearm (§§ 209, subd. (b), 12022.5; six counts of 
robbery while armed with a firearm (§§ 211, 12022, subd. (a)); two counts of rape 
in concert while armed with a firearm (§§ 261, subd. (a)(2), 264.1, 12022.3, 
subd. (b); two counts of oral copulation in concert while armed with a firearm 
(§§ 288a, subd. (d), 12022.3, subd. (b)); one count of kidnapping while personally 
using a firearm (§§ 207, 12022.5); one count of attempted robbery while 
personally using a firearm (§§ 211, 664, 12022.5); one count of robbery while 
personally using a firearm (§§ 211, 12022.5); two counts of kidnapping while 
armed with a firearm (§§ 207, 12022, subd. (a)). 
3 
covered, were led into a canyon area, where they were separated.  Vicks, his 
accomplice, and a third man were present.  The women were repeatedly sexually 
assaulted.  The three men then ran away.   
Less than two weeks later, Vicks and his accomplice forced two women at 
gunpoint into a car belonging to one of the women, then blocked a third woman‟s 
car and stole the third woman‟s purse.  After they drove away, the accomplice 
placed the hand of one of the women on his erect penis.  The two women then 
fought their way out of the car, hitting the accomplice in the head with his gun 
during the fight, and leaving their purses behind.  That evening, Vicks and his 
accomplice went to Vicks‟s cousin‟s apartment.  The cousin saw the two looking 
through women‟s purses and removing money from them.  The accomplice, whose 
head was bleeding, said that he and Vicks “had just gotten into a crazy incident.”  
The accomplice told Vicks‟s cousin that he had asked one of the women to orally 
copulate him, and described a fight that ended with the women‟s escape.  The 
cousin drove Vicks and his accomplice onto a freeway where Vicks threw the 
purses out of the car.  When the purses were returned by the police to the victims, 
one purse contained a paper with the name of Vicks‟s cousin on it.  The cousin 
informed the police that Vicks and the accomplice brought the purses to the 
cousin‟s house after the women had jumped out of the car nearby. 
B.  Parole Hearing 
Vicks began serving his life term on March 13, 2003.  His minimum 
eligible parole date was March 14, 2010, and his initial parole suitability hearing 
was held on February 3, 2009.  Applying section 3041.5 as amended by Marsy‟s 
Law in 2008, the Board found him unsuitable for parole, and further concluded 
that he should be denied another parole hearing for five years.   
4 
In announcing the Board‟s decision, the presiding commissioner noted that 
Vicks‟s offenses involved “a series of horrific crimes that happened over a very 
short period.  Your position is that it wasn‟t you and you did not participate in that, 
other than finding several of the victim‟s purses and failing to turn them in.”3  The 
commissioner noted that the Board accepts the facts found in the criminal 
prosecution, and observed that “[t]hese are the kinds of crimes that 
psychologically last a lifetime . . . .”  He added that “the offense was carried out 
dispassionately and certainly there was a level of calculation to the execution . . . .  
The offense was carried out in a manner that demonstrates disregard for human 
suffering and the motive was apparently self-gratification and financial 
gratification as well.”  The commissioner stated that Vicks‟s prior criminal history 
“did not weigh heavily into our decision, because it was frankly a long time ago 
and most of the issues were nonviolent . . . .”  He also stated that “you‟ve done a 
marvelous job on yourself,” and “[y]ou have remained in a very good status with 
regard to your disciplines . . . .”  He explained that “[o]ur biggest concern with 
you, sir, is your level of insight, it‟s difficult for us to measure that when you‟ve 
been convicted and it is a horrific crime in nature and you find yourself not 
coming to grips in any way, shape or form with that, other than you found yourself 
in possession of purses.”  He added that individuals sometimes have difficulty 
                                              
3  
In a statement petitioner prepared for the hearing, he stated that he “made a 
very irresponsible and life altering decision when I came in possession of purses 
belonging to [three victims],” but he “reiterate[d] that I am totally and 
unequivocally innocent of the crimes for which I was found guilty . . . .”  (See 
§ 5011, subd. (b) [“The Board . . . shall not require, when setting parole dates, an 
admission of guilt to any crime for which an inmate was committed”]; Cal. Code 
Regs., tit. 15, § 2281, subd. (b) [among the information considered in determining 
suitability for parole is “past and present attitude toward the crime”].) 
5 
coming to grips with the kinds of crimes Vicks committed, and that “[i]f that‟s 
what your struggle is, we wish you well, sir.”  The commissioner also stated that 
Vicks needed to reduce some of the ratings in his psychological evaluation.4  
Finally, with respect to the date of Vicks‟s next parole suitability hearing, the 
presiding commissioner stated that the commissioners “discussed at length what 
we thought would be appropriate and at this point we have reached a conclusion 
that a five-year denial is the appropriate denial . . . .”   
Vicks challenged the decision by filing a petition for writ of habeas corpus 
in San Diego County Superior Court, which the superior court denied on 
December 10, 2009.   
Vicks then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Court of Appeal.  
On May 11, 2011, following issuance of an order to show cause and briefing, the 
Court of Appeal, with one justice dissenting, filed an opinion vacating the Board‟s 
order to the extent the order deferred Vicks‟s subsequent parole suitability hearing 
for five years.  The majority concluded that the changes enacted by Marsy‟s Law 
to the scheme for setting parole hearings violate ex post facto principles as applied 
to prisoners who committed their crimes prior to the enactment of Marsy‟s Law.  
It directed the Board to issue a new order scheduling the hearing in accordance 
with the provisions of section 3041.5 in effect in 1983, which generally entitled a 
prisoner to an annual parole hearing but allowed deferrals of no more than three 
years in specified circumstances.   
                                              
4  
The psychological evaluation prepared for the parole hearing concluded 
that “[t]he combined weight of the various points of data indicates that the inmate 
poses a Medium-Low risk for Sexual Recidivism and a Low to Moderate risk of 
violence for general recidivism in the community.”   
6 
We granted review to address whether section 3041.5, as amended by 
Marsy‟s Law, may be applied to life inmates convicted before the effective date of 
the amendments without violating the ex post facto clauses of the state and federal 
Constitutions. 
II.  DISCUSSION 
A.  Marsy’s Law 
1.  Overview of Marsy’s Law 
Marsy‟s Law, which was enacted by the voters in November 2008, was 
named after a young woman who was murdered in 1983.  (Prop. 9, reprinted at 
Historical Notes, 1E West‟s Ann. Cal. Const. (2012) foll. art. I, § 28, p. 9.)  
According to the measure‟s uncodified findings and declarations (Prop. 9, 
Findings), following the arrest of Marsy‟s murderer, “Marsy‟s mother was 
shocked to meet him at a local supermarket” after he was released on bail without 
Marcy‟s family‟s receiving notice or opportunity to express opposition to his 
release.  (Id., ¶ 7.)  “Several years after his conviction and sentence to „life in 
prison,‟ the parole hearings for his release began.  In the first parole hearing, 
Marsy‟s mother suffered a heart attack fighting against his release.  Since then 
Marsy‟s family has endured the trauma of frequent parole hearings and constant 
anxiety that Marsy‟s killer would be released.”  (Id., ¶ 8.)  The law was “written 
on behalf of [Marsy‟s family], who were often treated as though they had no 
rights, and inspired by hundreds of thousands of victims of crime who have 
experienced the additional pain and frustration of a criminal justice system that too 
often fails to afford victims even the most basic of rights.”  (Id., ¶ 2.) 
The measure‟s findings express a number of grievances, including the 
failure to build adequate prisons and jails, the early release of inmates “after 
serving as little as 10 percent of the sentences imposed” (Prop. 9, Findings, ¶ 4, 
7 
West‟s Ann. Cal. Const., supra, at p. 9), the pain caused victims‟ families by 
frequent parole hearings, the failure of the criminal justice system to give victims 
“notice of important hearings in the prosecutions of their criminal wrongdoers, 
failure to provide them with an opportunity to speak and participate, failure to 
impose actual and just punishment upon their wrongdoers, and failure to extend to 
them some measure of finality to the trauma inflicted upon them by their 
wrongdoers.”  (Id., ¶ 9; see id., ¶ 5.)  Among the measure‟s stated purposes are to 
“[p]rovide victims with rights to justice and due process” (Prop. 9 , § 3, ¶ 1 
(Prop. 9, Purposes)), and to “eliminat[e] parole hearings in which there is no 
likelihood a murderer will be paroled . . . .”  (Id., ¶ 2.)  According to the measure, 
“ „Helter Skelter‟ inmates Bruce Davis and Leslie Van Houghton, two followers of 
Charles Manson convicted of multiple brutal murders, have had 38 parole hearings 
during the past 30 years.”  (Prop. 9, Findings, ¶ 6.) 
Marsy‟s Law includes both constitutional and statutory amendments.  The 
constitutional provisions recognize various rights of victims of crime and of the 
people of California, including the right to expect that crimes will be thoroughly 
investigated, and that criminals will be tried in a timely manner and “sufficiently 
punished in both the manner and the length of the sentences imposed.”  (Cal. 
Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (a)(5); see id., subd. (a)(4).)  The provisions also state 
that “[l]engthy appeals and other post-judgment proceedings that challenge 
criminal convictions, frequent and difficult parole hearings that threaten to release 
criminal offenders, and the ongoing threat that the sentences of criminal 
wrongdoers will be reduced, prolong the suffering of crime victims for many years 
after the crimes themselves have been perpetrated.”  (Id., subd. (a)(6).)  The 
provisions recognize a right of crime victims to notice of and to be present at “all 
public proceedings . . . at which the defendant and the prosecutor are entitled to be 
present and of all parole or other post-conviction release proceedings . . . .”  (Id., 
8 
subd. (b)(7).)  They afford a right “[t]o be heard . . . at any proceeding . . . 
involving a post-arrest release decision, plea, sentencing, post-conviction release 
decision, or any proceeding in which a right of the victim is at issue.”  (Id., 
subd. (b)(8).)  They also entitle victims to provide and receive information related 
to sentencing of a defendant.  (Id., subd. (b)(10), (11).)  With respect to parole, the 
provisions afford victims the right “[t]o be informed of all parole procedures, to 
participate in the parole process, to provide information to the parole authority to 
be considered before the parole of the offender, and to be notified . . . of the parole 
or other release of the offender.”  (Id., subd. (b)(15.)   
Most of the law‟s statutory amendments relate to parole.  As described 
more fully below, Marsy‟s Law amended section 3041.5 to increase the time 
between parole hearings, absent a finding by the Board that an earlier hearing is 
appropriate.  It also amended section 3042 to expand the rights of victims to 
present information to the Board, and to require the Board to consider the “entire 
and uninterrupted” statements of victims, their families and their representatives.  
(§ 3043, subd. (d).)  It added section 3044, which specifies that in the event a 
parolee‟s parole is revoked, the parolee shall not be entitled to any procedural 
rights other than those specified in that section.  Finally, it added section 679.026, 
which requires law enforcement agencies to take specified steps to inform crime 
victims of their rights under Marsy‟s Law. 
9 
2. Amendments to section 3041.5 affecting the time within which 
Vicks’s parole hearing must be held 
In 1983, at the time Vicks committed the crimes for which he is 
incarcerated, section 3041.5 required the Board of Prison Terms5 to provide 
annual parole hearings following the initial hearing, except that a hearing could be 
deferred for (1) up to two years “if the board finds that it is not reasonable to 
expect that parole would be granted at a hearing during the following year and 
states the bases for the finding,” or (2) up to three years “if the prisoner has been 
convicted . . . of more than one offense which involves the taking of a life, and the 
board finds that it is not reasonable to expect that parole would be granted at a 
hearing during the following years and states the bases for the finding.”  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (b)(2), as amended by Stats. 1982, ch. 1435, § 1, p. 5474.)  Thus, at the time 
Vicks committed his crimes, he was entitled to an annual parole hearing unless the 
Board found that it was not reasonable to expect that he would be granted parole 
in a year, in which case his parole hearing could be deferred for up to two years. 
As amended in 2008 by Marsy‟s Law, section 3041.5 establishes longer 
deferral periods following the denial of parole than did the statute in 1983.6  The 
                                              
5  
The Board of Prison Terms was abolished and replaced by the Board of 
Parole Hearings, effective July 1, 2005.  (§ 5075; Gov. Code, § 12838.4; we use 
the term “Board” to refer to both entities.) 
6  
In 1990, section 3041.5 was amended to authorize a deferral of three years 
“if the prisoner has been convicted . . . of more than one offense which involves 
the taking of a life,” and five years “if the prisoner has been convicted . . . of more 
than two murders . . . .”  (§ 3041.5, former subd. (b)(2)(B), (C); Stats. 1990, 
ch. 1053, § 1, pp. 4380-4381.)  To defer for three or five years, the Board was 
required to find that it was not reasonable to expect that parole would be granted at 
a hearing in the interim period, and to state the bases for the finding in writing.  
Also, in the event of a five-year deferral, “the prisoner‟s central file shall be 
reviewed by a deputy commissioner within three years at which time the deputy 
commissioner may direct that a hearing be held within one year.”  (§ 3041.5, 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
10 
deferral periods range from a default period of 15 years to a minimum of three 
years.  More specifically, the next hearing is to occur in 15 years, “unless the 
board finds by clear and convincing evidence that the criteria relevant to the 
setting of parole release dates . . . are such that consideration of the public and 
victim‟s safety does not require a more lengthy period of incarceration for the 
prisoner than 10 additional years.”  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)(A).)  If the Board 
makes such a finding, the next hearing shall be in 10 years, unless the Board finds, 
again by clear and convincing evidence and considering the same criteria and 
considerations, that a period of more than seven years is not required.  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (b)(3)(B).)  In that event, the next hearing shall be in three, five, or seven 
years.  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)(C).)  The Board is required to “consider[] the views 
and interests of the victim” before selecting the appropriate deferral period.  
(§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3).) 
Although the amendments mandate longer deferral periods after the Board 
declines to set a parole date, they also give the Board discretion to advance the 
date of the next parole suitability hearing “when a change in circumstances or new 
information establishes a reasonable likelihood that consideration of the public and 
victim‟s safety does not require the additional period of incarceration of the 
prisoner provided” by the statutory deferral periods.  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(4).)  In 
addition, “[a]n inmate may request that the board exercise its discretion to advance 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
former subd. (b)(2)(C); Stats. 1990, ch. 1053, § 1, p. 4381.)  In 1994, the provision 
concerning five-year deferrals was amended to apply to any prisoner convicted of 
murder.  In addition, the statute was amended to require the Board to “adopt 
procedures that relate to the criteria for setting the hearing between two and five 
years.”  (§ 3041.5, former subd. (b)(2)(B); Stats. 1994, ch. 560, § 1, pp. 2833-
2834.) 
11 
a hearing . . . to an earlier date, by submitting a written request to the board, with 
notice, upon request, and a copy to the victim which shall set forth the change in 
circumstances or new information that establishes a reasonable likelihood that 
consideration of the public safety does not require the additional period of 
incarceration of the inmate.”  (§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(1).)  The Board may summarily 
deny a petition to advance if the petition does not comply with these requirements, 
or if, in the judgment of the Board, the change in circumstances or new 
information is insufficient to justify the Board‟s exercising its discretion under 
subdivision (b)(4).  (§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(2).)  Section 3041.5 does not expressly 
address what other actions the Board may take in response to a written request, but 
if the petition sets forth a “change in circumstances or new information that 
establishes a reasonable likelihood that consideration of the public safety does not 
require the additional period of incarceration of the inmate,” the Board has 
authority under subdivision (b)(4) to hold a parole suitability hearing at an earlier 
date than was set when parole was previously denied.   
Section 3041.5 provides that “[a]n inmate may make only one written 
request [to advance a hearing] during each three-year period.”  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (d)(3).)  The three-year period is calculated from one of two start dates:  
“Following either [1] a summary denial of [an inmate‟s] request . . . or [2] the 
decision of the board after a hearing described in subdivision (a) to not set a parole 
date, the inmate shall not be entitled to submit another request for a hearing 
pursuant to subdivision (a) until a three-year period of time has elapsed from the 
summary denial or decision of the board.”  (§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(3).)   
The Court of Appeal interpreted this timing provision “to set a three-year 
„blackout‟ period for an inmate to trigger the advanced hearings safeguard, 
because that section states that „[f]ollowing either a summary denial of a request 
made pursuant to paragraph [(d)(1)], or the decision of the board after a hearing 
12 
described in [section 3041.5, subdivision (a)] to not set a parole date, the inmate 
shall not be entitled to submit another request for a hearing pursuant to [section 
3041.5, subdivision (a)] until a three-year period of time has elapsed from the 
summary denial or decision of the board.‟  (§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(3), italics added.)  
Because a regularly scheduled parole suitability hearing results (as it did here) in a 
„decision of the board after a hearing described in [section 3041.5, subdivision (a)] 
to not set a parole date,‟ the statute appears to impose a three-year blackout period 
for an inmate to petition for an advanced hearing when parole is denied following 
a regularly scheduled suitability hearing.”   
We disagree with this interpretation, and conclude that section 3041.5, 
subdivision (d) does not prohibit an inmate from making a written request to 
advance a parole suitability hearing within three years after a regularly scheduled 
hearing at which parole is denied.7  As noted above, if a written request complies 
with the statutory requirements and sets forth a “change in circumstances or new 
information that establishes a reasonable likelihood that consideration of the 
public safety does not require the additional period of incarceration of the inmate” 
(§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(1)), the Board presumably will hold a parole suitability 
hearing at an earlier date than was set when parole was previously denied.  Thus, 
there are two possible outcomes of a written request — denial of the request or an 
earlier parole hearing.  If the request is denied, the inmate may not make another 
request for three years.  Similarly, if the Board holds an earlier parole suitability 
                                              
7  
Vicks relies in part on the initiative measure‟s Purposes, which identify a 
purpose “to provide that a convicted murderer can receive a parole hearing no 
more frequently than every three years.”  (Prop. 9, Purposes, ¶ 2, West‟s Ann. Cal. 
Const., supra, at p. 9.)  This statement is a general description of the measure, and 
does not prevail over the substantive terms of section 3041.5. 
13 
hearing — “a hearing described in subdivision (a)” — rather than denying the 
request, and it declines to set a parole date after the hearing, the inmate may not 
make another request for three years after this more recent decision of the Board.  
(§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(3).)  In light of the reference to “another” request, it appears 
that subdivision (d)(3) calculates the three-year period from the date on which a 
request for an earlier hearing is finally resolved, i.e., from (1) the date of the 
summary denial or (2) the date of the advanced hearing at which the setting of a 
parole date is again denied.  Therefore, a prisoner may make his or her first 
request for a new hearing at any time following the denial of parole at a regularly 
scheduled hearing, and then may make another request every three years.8   
                                              
8  
The Board has also interpreted this timing provision to allow the first 
request to be made at any time.  In its Administrative Directive No. 09/01, the 
Board states that the provision “allows the inmate to make one request for an 
advanced hearing date during each three year period, regardless of the denial 
length.  If the request is granted and the inmate receives a denial at the advanced 
hearing, or if the request is summarily denied, the inmate cannot submit another 
request for an advanced hearing until a three-year period of time has elapsed from 
either the date of the summary denial or the advanced hearing[.]”  
( [as of Mar. 4, 2013].)  
Similarly, the form the Board has made available to prisoners to petition to 
advance a hearing date states:  “You can make one initial request for an advanced 
hearing date following a denial of parole at any time, but from then on you can 
only submit requests every three years.”  (Bd. Parole Hearings, Petition to 
Advance Hearing Date, p. 1  [as of Mar. 4, 2013] (Petition); see 
Garner v. Jones (2000) 529 U.S. 244, 256 (Garner) [“Absent a demonstration to 
the contrary, we presume the Board follows its statutory commands and internal 
policies in fulfilling its obligations”]; Good Samaritan Hospital v. Shalala (1993) 
508 U.S. 402, 414 [“Confronted with an ambiguous statutory provision, we 
generally will defer to a permissible interpretation espoused by the agency 
entrusted with its implementation”]; Yamaha Corp of America v. State Bd. of 
Equalization (1998) 19 Cal.4th 1, 7 [“An agency interpretation of the meaning and 
legal effect of a statute is entitled to consideration and respect by the courts”].) 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
14 
B.  Prohibition on ex post facto laws 
The United States Constitution states:  “No state shall . . . pass any . . . ex 
post facto law . . . .”  (U.S. Const., art. I, § 10, cl. 1.)  The California Constitution 
also provides that an “ex post facto law . . . may not be passed.”  (Cal. Const., 
art. I, § 9.)  Our California provision provides the same protections and is analyzed 
in the same manner as the federal provision.  (In re Rosenkrantz (2002) 29 Cal.4th 
616, 640, fn. 6 (Rosenkrantz).)  Therefore, we may look to federal law in 
analyzing Vicks‟s challenge under both the federal and state provisions concerning 
ex post facto laws. 
The purpose of the ex post facto doctrine is to ensure fair notice of the 
conduct that constitutes a crime and of the punishment that may be imposed for a 
crime.  (Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 638.)9  Therefore, it is “aimed at laws 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
 
Based on our interpretation of section 3041.5, subdivision (d)(3) as 
calculating the three-year period from the date of the denial of the request to 
advance or the denial of parole at an advanced hearing, and consistent with the 
Board‟s statements that (1) a prisoner must wait “until a three-year period of time 
has elapsed from either the date of the summary denial or the advanced hearing” 
and (2) he or she may subsequently submit requests every three years, a prisoner 
may file another request three years later, regardless of whether a regularly 
scheduled hearing has occurred in the meantime.  For example, if a prisoner whose 
next hearing is deferred for three years unsuccessfully petitions after two years to 
advance the hearing, the prisoner will have the regularly scheduled hearing a year 
later, and, if parole is denied, will be entitled to petition to advance the next 
hearing two years later (three years after the summary denial of the earlier 
petition).   
9  
The purpose and scope of the ex post facto clause are described more fully 
in our opinion in Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 Cal.4th at pages 638 through 640, which 
found no violation of ex post facto principles where the Governor reversed the 
Board‟s grant of parole to a prisoner who had committed his crime before the 
enactment of the Governor‟s authority to reverse the Board‟s decision.  (Id. at 
pp. 651-652.) 
15 
that „retroactively alter the definition of crimes or increase the punishment for 
criminal acts.‟  [Citations.]”  (California Dept. of Corrections v. Morales (1995) 
514 U.S. 499, 504 (Morales).)  “Retroactive changes in laws governing parole of 
prisoners, in some instances, may be violative of [the prohibition on retroactive 
increases in punishment].  [Citations.]  Whether retroactive application of a 
particular change in parole law respects the prohibition on ex post facto legislation 
is often a question of particular difficulty when the discretion vested in a parole 
board is taken into account.”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 250.)   
Two United States Supreme Court opinions are particularly pertinent to our 
inquiry — Morales, which considered California‟s 1981 increase in the potential 
deferral period between parole suitability hearings, and Garner, which reviewed 
Georgia‟s increase in its potential deferral period.  In each case, the court 
identified the controlling inquiry as “whether retroactive application of the change 
. . . created „a sufficient risk of increasing the measure of punishment attached to 
the covered crimes.‟ ”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 250, quoting Morales, 
supra, 514 U.S. at p. 509.)  As discussed below, however, the high court 
undertook somewhat different approaches in the two cases in evaluating whether 
the change created a sufficient risk of increasing a prisoner‟s period of 
incarceration.  The analysis in Morales focused on details of California‟s 1981 
amendment demonstrating that the change was unlikely to result in longer 
incarceration.  In contrast, Garner focused on the broad discretion held by 
Georgia‟s parole board, a power that includes the authority “to change and adapt 
based on experience.”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 253.) 
We begin with Morales, supra, 514 U.S. 499.  Prior to the 1981 amendment 
considered in Morales, a prisoner who was denied parole at his or her first parole 
suitability hearing was entitled to a subsequent suitability hearing annually.  The 
1981 amendment “authorized the Board to defer subsequent suitability hearings 
16 
for up to three years if the prisoner has been convicted of „more than one offense 
which involves the taking of a life‟ and if the Board „finds that it is not reasonable 
to expect that parole would be granted at a hearing during the following years and 
states the bases for the finding.‟  [Citation.]”  (Id. at p. 503.)   
The high court began its analysis by rejecting the prisoner‟s reliance on 
three cases in which a violation of the ex post facto clause was found:  Lindsey v. 
Washington (1937) 301 U.S. 397, which addressed a law that altered the sentence 
for the defendant‟s crime from “not more than fifteen years” to a sentence of 
15 years; Miller v. Florida (1987) 482 U.S. 423, which addressed an increase in 
the presumptive sentencing range; and Weaver v. Graham (1981) 450 U.S. 24, 
which addressed a reduction in the credit prisoners earned toward their time served 
through good behavior in prison.  “In contrast to the laws at issue in Lindsey, 
Weaver, and Miller (which had the purpose and effect of enhancing the range of 
available prison terms, [citation]), the evident focus of the California amendment 
was merely „ “to relieve the [Board] from the costly and time-consuming 
responsibility of scheduling parole hearings” ‟ for prisoners who have no 
reasonable chance of being released.  [Citation.]  Rather than changing the 
sentencing range applicable to covered crimes, the 1981 amendment simply „alters 
the method to be followed‟ in fixing a parole release date under identical 
substantive standards.  [Citations.]”  (Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at pp. 507-508.) 
The high court also rejected the view that “any legislative change that has 
any conceivable risk of affecting a prisoner‟s punishment” should be held to 
violate the ex post facto clause.  (Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at p. 508.)  “Under 
respondent‟s approach, the judiciary would be charged under the Ex Post Facto 
Clause with the micromanagement of an endless array of legislative adjustments to 
parole and sentencing procedures . . . .”  (Ibid.)  Instead, “the question of what 
legislative adjustments „will be held to be of sufficient moment to transgress the 
17 
constitutional prohibition‟ must be a matter of „degree.‟  [Citation.]  In evaluating 
the constitutionality [of a change], we must determine whether it produces a 
sufficient risk of increasing the measure of punishment attached to the covered 
crimes.”  (Id. at p. 509.) 
The court concluded the Board‟s new authority to defer hearings created 
only a speculative possibility of increasing a prisoner‟s punishment.  “First, the 
amendment applies only to a class of prisoners for whom the likelihood of release 
on parole is quite remote” (Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at p. 510), prisoners who had 
been convicted of “more than one offense which involves the taking of a life.”  
(§ 3041.5, former subd. (b)(2); Stats. 1981, ch. 1111, § 4, p. 4339.)  In support of 
its conclusion, it cited statistics from our opinion in In re Jackson (1985) 39 
Cal.3d 464, 473, that “90% of all prisoners are found unsuitable for parole at the 
initial hearing, while 85% are found unsuitable at the second and subsequent 
hearings.  [Citation.]  In light of these numbers, the amendment „was seen as a 
means “to relieve the [Board] from the costly and time-consuming responsibility 
of scheduling parole hearings for prisoners who have no chance of being 
released.” ‟  [Citation.]”10  (Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at p. 511.) 
                                              
10  
In In re Jackson, supra, 39 Cal.3d 464, we addressed a 1982 amendment to 
section 3041.5 that authorized the Board in all cases, not only those involving the 
taking of a life, to defer the next parole hearing for up to two years if the Board 
found it was not reasonable to expect that parole would be granted in a year.  
(Stats. 1982, ch. 1435, § 1, p. 5474.)  We held that the amendment was “a 
procedural change outside the purview of the ex post facto clause” (Jackson, 
supra, 39 Cal.3d at p. 472) because it did not alter the criteria related to parole 
suitability or release on parole, and it “did not entirely deprive an inmate of the 
right to a parole suitability hearing.”  (Id. at p. 473.)  We acknowledged that the 
change in the frequency of hearings “did eliminate the possibility that a parole 
date would be set within the period of the postponement.  However, the likelihood 
that the postponement actually delays release on parole until after the next parole 
hearing appears slight.”  (Ibid.)  In support of this conclusion, we cited legislative 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
18 
Second, the amendment was carefully tailored to the purpose of reducing 
the number of futile hearings.  The timing of the initial parole suitability hearing 
remained the same; only after the Board had concluded at a parole hearing that (1) 
the prisoner was not suitable for parole and (2) it was not reasonable to expect that 
the prisoner would be suitable for parole in a year would the timing of a prisoner‟s 
hearings be affected.  In addition, the Board was required to conduct a full hearing 
and state the bases of its finding, and there appeared to the high court to be an 
opportunity for an administrative appeal.  “Moreover, the Board retains the 
authority to tailor the frequency of subsequent suitability hearings to the particular 
circumstances of the individual prisoner.”  (Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at p. 511.)  
The court concluded:  “In light of the particularized findings required under the 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
committee analyses that set forth statistics, noted in Morales, supra, 514 U.S. 499, 
concerning the percentage of prisoners found suitable for parole.  We explained 
that “[i]n view of these statistics, the 1982 amendment was seen as a means „to 
relieve the [Board] from the costly and time-consuming responsibility of 
scheduling parole hearings for prisoners who have no chance of being released.‟  
[Citation.]”  (Jackson, supra, 39 Cal.3d at p. 473.)  We also concluded, based on 
petitions we had received from prisoners who had been found suitable for parole, 
that “the periods between the date of the suitability finding and the proposed 
release date vary from three and one-half to nineteen years” (id. at p. 474), 
because a prisoner may be found suitable for parole before he or she has served 
the minimum period required by law.  (See post, pp. 29-31.)  This period between 
the finding of suitability and release “reinforce[d] the conclusion that the „practical 
effect‟ of a hearing postponement is not significant.”  (Ibid.)   
 
Jackson‟s analysis — whether the change is “procedural” — is no longer 
dispositive of the issue of whether a change violates ex post facto principles.  (See 
Collins v. Youngblood (1990) 497 U.S. 37, 46 [“by simply labeling a law 
„procedural,‟ a legislature does not thereby immunize it from scrutiny under the Ex 
Post Facto clause”]; Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 651, fn. 9 [“Collins did 
not suggest that the circumstance that a change is procedural rather than 
substantive has no bearing on the ex post facto question”].) 
19 
amendment and the broad discretion given to the Board, the narrow class of 
prisoners covered by the amendment cannot reasonably expect that their prospects 
for early release on parole would be enhanced by the opportunity of annual 
hearings.”  (Id. at p. 512.) 
In response to the contention that there was a possibility a prisoner would 
have a change in circumstances that would render him or her suitable for parole 
earlier than the scheduled hearing, the court stated that Morales had failed “to 
provide any support for his speculation that the multiple murderers and other 
prisoners subject to the amendment might experience an unanticipated change that 
is sufficiently monumental to alter their suitability for release on parole.”  
(Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at p. 512.)  Assuming a prisoner might experience such 
a change, the court found no basis in the record “for concluding that [such] a 
prisoner . . . would be precluded from seeking an expedited hearing from the 
Board.”  (Ibid.)  On the contrary, this court had suggested in In re Jackson, supra, 
39 Cal.3d at page 475, that the Board had discretion to advance a hearing, and the 
brief of the California Department of Corrections in Morales informed the high 
court that “the Board‟s „practice‟ is to „review for merit any communication from 
an inmate asking for an earlier suitability hearing.‟ ”  (Morales, supra, at p. 512.)  
The court concluded that “[a]n expedited hearing by the Board . . . would remove 
any possibility of harm even under the hypothetical circumstances suggested by 
[Morales].”  (Id. at p. 513.) 
Finally, the court concluded that “[e]ven if a prisoner were denied an 
expedited hearing, there is no reason to think that such postponement would 
extend any prisoner‟s actual period of confinement.”  (Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at 
p. 513.)  In support of its conclusion, the court cited our explanation in In re 
Jackson, supra, 39 Cal.3d at page 474, that a finding of suitability for parole rarely 
leads to a prisoner‟s immediate release, and may be followed by years of 
20 
incarceration until the prisoner serves the minimum period of incarceration 
required by law.  If a prisoner becomes suitable for parole before the next 
regularly scheduled hearing, “the Board retains the discretion to expedite the 
release date of such a prisoner.  Thus, a prisoner who could show that he was 
„suitable‟ for parole two years prior to such a finding by the Board might well be 
entitled to secure a release date that reflects that fact.  Such a prisoner‟s ultimate 
date of release would be entirely unaffected by the change in the timing of 
suitability hearings.”  (Morales, supra, at p. 513.) 
The high court next addressed the validity of an increase in the period 
between parole hearings in Garner, supra, 529 U.S. 244.  Garner involved a 
prisoner‟s challenge to a change in Georgia‟s parole law that allowed that state‟s 
parole board to increase the period of time between parole hearings.  At the time 
the prisoner committed his most recent offense, he was entitled to a parole hearing 
every three years after his initial denial of parole.  Thereafter, the law was changed 
to require a hearing “ „at least every eight years‟ ” after the initial denial.  (Id. at 
p. 247.)   
The court began its analysis by noting several principles it had recognized 
in Morales, supra, 514 U.S. 499.  “[N]ot every retroactive procedural change 
creating a risk of affecting an inmate‟s terms or conditions of confinement is 
prohibited.  [Citation.]  The question is „a matter of “degree.” ‟  [Citation.]  The 
controlling inquiry, we determined, was whether retroactive application of the 
change in California law created „a sufficient risk of increasing the measure of 
punishment attached to the covered crimes.‟  [Citation.]”  (Garner, supra, 529 
U.S. at p. 250.)  The court acknowledged the numerous factors it had identified in 
support of its conclusion in Morales that California‟s decrease in the frequency of 
parole hearings did not violate the ex post facto clause, but it rejected the 
prisoner‟s focus on the differences between Georgia‟s amended parole law and the 
21 
California law reviewed in Morales, such as Georgia‟s longer potential deferral 
and the application of Georgia‟s amendment to all prisoners serving life sentences.  
“These differences are not dispositive.  The question is whether the amended 
Georgia Rule creates a significant risk of prolonging respondent‟s incarceration.”  
(Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 251.)  The court reiterated that “the Ex Post Facto 
Clause should not be employed for „the micromanagement of an endless array of 
legislative adjustments to parole and sentencing procedures.‟  [Citation.]  These 
remain important concerns.  The States must have due flexibility in formulating 
parole procedures and addressing problems associated with confinement and 
release.”  (Id. at p. 252.) 
The court observed that “[t]he case turns on the operation of the 
amendment . . . within the whole context of Georgia‟s parole system.”  (Garner, 
supra, 529 U.S. at p. 252.)  It then reviewed Georgia‟s parole suitability criteria, 
which “illustrate[d] the broad discretion the Parole Board possesses in determining 
whether an inmate should receive early release.”  (Id. at p. 253.)  Georgia law 
required the parole board to consider a prisoner‟s good conduct, reading ability, 
and efficient performance of his or her duties.  It provided that “ „[n]o inmate shall 
be placed on parole until and unless the board shall find that there is a reasonable 
probability that . . . he will live and conduct himself as a respectable and law-
abiding person and that his release will be compatible with his own welfare and 
the welfare of society.‟ ”  (Id. at p. 252.)  The law also prohibited parole unless the 
board was satisfied that the prisoner would have employment or not otherwise 
become a public burden.  “Only upon a showing that the Board engaged in a 
„gross abuse of discretion‟ [could] a prisoner challenge a parole denial in the 
Georgia courts.”  (Id. at p. 253.) 
The court acknowledged that “[t]he presence of discretion does not displace 
the protections of the Ex Post Facto Clause,” but added that, to the extent notice of 
22 
the potential penalty prior to the commission of an offense is an aspect of ex post 
facto doctrine, “we can say with some assurance that where parole is concerned 
discretion, by its very definition, is subject to changes in the manner in which it is 
informed and then exercised.  The idea of discretion is that it has the capacity, and 
the obligation, to change and adapt based on experience.  New insights into the 
accuracy of predictions about the offense and the risk of recidivism consequent 
upon the offender‟s release, along with a complex of other factors, will inform 
parole decisions.  [Citation.]  The essence of respondent‟s case, as we see it, is not 
that discretion has been changed in its exercise but that, in the period between 
parole reviews, it will not be exercised at all.”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at 
pp. 253-254.) 
With respect to the concern that discretion would not be exercised during 
the longer period between hearings, the court noted that “[t]he law changing the 
frequency of parole reviews is qualified in two important respects.  First, the law 
vests the Parole Board with discretion as to how often to set an inmate‟s date for 
reconsideration, with eight years for the maximum.  [Citation.]  Second, the 
Board‟s policies permit „expedited parole reviews in the event of a change in their 
circumstance or where the Board receives new information that would warrant a 
sooner review.‟ ”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 254.)  The court concluded that 
“[t]hese qualifications permit a more careful and accurate exercise of the 
discretion the Board has had from the outset.  Rather than being required to review 
cases pro forma, the Board may set reconsideration dates according to the 
likelihood that a review will result in meaningful considerations as to whether an 
inmate is suitable for release.  The Board‟s stated policy is to provide for 
reconsideration at 8-year intervals „when, in the Board‟s determination, it is not 
reasonable to expect that parole would be granted during the intervening years.‟  
[Citation.]  The policy enables the Board to put its resources to better use, to 
23 
ensure that those prisoners who should receive parole come to its attention.  By 
concentrating its efforts on those cases identified as having a good possibility of 
early release, the Board‟s Rules might result in the release of some prisoners 
earlier than would have been the case otherwise.”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at 
p. 254.) 
The court rejected the lower court‟s view that it “ „seem[ed] certain‟ ” some 
prisoners would remain incarcerated for a longer period than under the previous 
law.  “The standard announced in Morales requires a more rigorous analysis of the 
level of risk created by the change in law.  [Citation.]  When the rule does not by 
its own terms show a significant risk, the respondent must demonstrate, by 
evidence drawn from the rule‟s practical implementation by the agency charged 
with exercising discretion, that its retroactive application will result in a longer 
period of incarceration than under the earlier rule.”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at 
p. 255.)  The evidence in the record in Garner did not contain adequate 
information to determine whether the change in the law had lengthened the 
prisoner‟s time of incarceration. 
The court also faulted the lower court‟s failure to consider the parole 
board‟s internal policy statement.  “It is often the case that an agency‟s policies 
and practices will indicate the manner in which it is exercising its discretion.”  
(Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 256.)  It noted that “[i]n Morales, we relied upon 
the State‟s representation that its parole board had a practice of granting inmates‟ 
requests for early review.  [Citation.]  The policy statement here, by contrast, is a 
formal, published statement as to how the Board intends to enforce its Rule.  It 
follows a fortiori from Morales that the Court of Appeals should not have 
disregarded the policy.  Absent any demonstration to the contrary from 
respondent, we respect the Board‟s representation that inmates, upon making a 
24 
showing of a „change in their circumstance[s]‟ or upon the Board‟s receipt of „new 
information,‟ may request expedited consideration.”  (Id. at pp. 256-257.) 
Finally, the court noted that the prisoner claimed he had not been allowed 
sufficient discovery, and stated that “[t]he matter of adequate discovery is one for 
the Court of Appeals or, as need be, for the District Court in the first instance.”  
(Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 257.)  Therefore, it remanded the case for further 
proceedings. 
C.  Is there a significant risk the changes will prolong a prisoner’s 
incarceration? 
As the court observed in Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at page 252, analysis of 
whether a change in parole procedures violates ex post facto principles requires 
consideration of how the change operates within the context of the entire parole 
system.  Therefore, we begin with a review of California‟s parole system. 
1.  California’s parole system 
The power to grant parole lies with the Board.  (§§ 3040, 5075 et seq.)  A 
panel of two or more commissioners or deputy commissioners must meet one year 
prior to a prisoner‟s minimum eligible parole release date to consider whether to 
set a parole date.11  “The panel . . . shall set a release date unless it determines that 
                                              
11  
The minimum release date is addressed in section 3046, which provides 
that “[n]o prisoner imprisoned under a life sentence may be paroled until he or she 
has served the greater of the following:  [¶]  (1) A term of at least seven calendar 
years.  [¶]  (2) A term as established pursuant to any other provision of law that 
establishes a minimum term or minimum period of confinement under a life 
sentence before eligibility for parole.”  (§ 3046, subd. (a).)  The calculation of 
sentences when a person is convicted of multiple crimes is addressed in section 
669, which provides that “[w]henever a person is committed to prison on a life 
sentence which is ordered to run consecutive to any determinate term of 
imprisonment, the determinate term of imprisonment shall be served first and no 
part thereof shall be credited toward the person‟s eligibility for parole as 
calculated pursuant to Section 3046 or pursuant to any other section of law that 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
25 
the gravity of the current convicted offense or offenses, or the timing and gravity 
of current or past convicted offense or offenses, is such that consideration of the 
public safety requires a more lengthy period of incarceration for this individual, 
and that a parole date, therefore, cannot be fixed at this meeting.”  (§ 3041, 
subd. (b).)   
Section 3041 directs the Board to “establish criteria for the setting of parole 
release dates.”  (§ 3041, subd. (a).)  Pursuant to this directive, the Board has 
promulgated regulations identifying circumstances that tend to indicate suitability 
or unsuitability for release on parole.  The circumstances identified in the 
regulations “are set forth as general guidelines; the importance attached to any 
circumstance or combination of circumstances in a particular case is left to the 
judgment of the panel.”  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2281, subds. (c), (d).)12   
The Board‟s regulations identify six circumstances that tend to indicate 
unsuitability for release on parole:  (1) the commitment offense was committed “in 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
establishes a minimum period of confinement under the life sentence before 
eligibility for parole.”   
12  
Division 2 of title 15 of the California Code of Regulations sets forth 
regulations related to the functions of the Board.  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, 
§§ 2000-2870.)  Chapter 3 of division 2 sets forth regulations concerning 
procedures for parole.  (Id., §§ 2230-2439.1.)  Within chapter 3, the articles that 
address the criteria and guidelines related to the granting or denial of parole are 
divided into articles based upon the crime that is the basis of the life sentence.  
(Id., §§ 2280-2292 [murders committed before Nov. 8, 1978, and aggravated 
kidnapping], 2400-2411 [murders committed on or after Nov. 8, 1978, and 
specified attempted murders], 2420-2429.1 [habitual offenders sentenced under 
§ 667.7], 2430-2439.1 [sex offenders sentenced under § 667.51].)  As relevant 
here, the provisions are substantially identical among the various articles.  
Therefore, in our summary we cite only one set of regulations, those set forth in 
article 5.  (Id., §§ 2280-2292.)  
26 
an especially heinous, atrocious or cruel manner,” including factors such as 
multiple victims, a dispassionate and calculated manner, abuse or defilement of 
the victim, an exceptionally callous disregard for human suffering, and an 
inexplicable or trivial motive; (2) a previous record of violence, particularly at an 
early age; (3) a history of unstable or tumultuous relationships; (4) previous 
sadistic sexual offenses; (5) a lengthy history of severe mental problems related to 
the crime; and (6) serious misconduct while incarcerated.  (Cal. Code Regs., 
tit. 15, §§ 2281, subd. (c).)   
The regulations identify nine circumstances that tend to show suitability for 
release on parole:  (1) the absence of a juvenile record; (2) a history of reasonably 
stable relationships with others; (3) actions that tend to demonstrate remorse, 
including attempting to assist the victim and exhibiting an understanding of the 
nature and magnitude of the crime; (4) the commission of the crime was “the 
result of significant stress in [the prisoner‟s] life, especially if the stress had built 
over a long period of time”; (5) the actions were the result of “Battered Woman 
Syndrome”; (6) the absence of a significant criminal history; (7) “[t]he prisoner‟s 
present age reduces the probability of recidivism”; (8) “[t]he prisoner has made 
realistic plans for release or has developed marketable skills that can be put to use 
upon release”; and (9) activities in prison that “indicate an enhanced ability to 
function within the law upon release.”  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2281, 
subd. (d).) 
The Board applies these criteria to “attempt to predict by subjective 
analysis whether the inmate will be able to live in society without committing 
additional antisocial acts.  [Citation.]  „The [Board‟s] exercise of its broad 
discretion “involves the deliberate assessment of a wide variety of individualized 
factors on a case-by-case basis, and the striking of a balance between the interests 
of the inmate and of the public.”  [Citation.]‟  [Citation.]  „The [Board‟s] 
27 
discretion in parole matters has been described as “great” [citation] and “almost 
unlimited” [citation].‟  [Citation.]”  (Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 655.)  
The Board‟s discretion is limited only by the requirements that it provide an 
individualized consideration of all relevant factors, provide a written statement 
that sets forth its reasons for denying a parole date, and not render an arbitrary 
decision.  (Ibid.)   
If the Board determines a prisoner is suitable for parole, it then sets a parole 
date.  “The release date shall be set in a manner that will provide uniform terms 
for offenses of similar gravity and magnitude with respect to their threat to the 
public, and that will comply with the sentencing rules that the Judicial Council 
may issue and any sentencing information relevant to the setting of parole release 
dates.”  (§ 3041, subd. (a).)   
Pursuant to section 3041, the Board has promulgated regulations that 
establish criteria for setting parole release dates, including regulations that 
establish a life prisoner‟s “total life term.”  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2285-
2289.)  The Board‟s regulations require the panel to set a “base term,” which the 
panel derives by considering all of the circumstances of the most serious of the life 
offenses the prisoner committed.  The regulations set forth matrices of factors that 
determine the lower, middle, and upper base terms for particular crimes.13  “The 
                                              
13  
For example, when the most serious offense is kidnapping for robbery, as 
Vicks committed, the matrix considers the distance, duration, and destination of 
the movement, whether the victim was taken as a hostage, whether the crime 
involved intricate prior planning, whether the victim was sexually assaulted or 
otherwise seriously injured or assaulted, and how significant the injuries were.  A 
crime involving minor movement and minor injury is assigned a base term range 
of 8, 10 or 12 years, while a crime involving intricate planning, and in which the 
victim suffered major injuries, is assigned a base term range of 13, 15, or 17 years.  
(Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2282, subd. (c).) 
28 
panel shall impose the middle base term reflected in the matrix unless the panel 
finds circumstances in aggravation or mitigation.”  (Id., § 2282, subd. (a);14 see 
generally In re Dannenberg (2005) 34 Cal.4th 1061, 1078-1079.)  Circumstances 
in aggravation include such factors as the vulnerability of the victim, whether 
there was a special relationship of confidence and trust with the victim, and the 
prisoner‟s leadership role in the crime.  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2283, 
subd. (a).)  Circumstances in mitigation include such factors as whether the 
prisoner was induced by others to commit the crime, whether the prisoner tried to 
help the victim, and whether the crime was committed in unusual circumstances 
unlikely to reoccur.  (Id., § 2284.)  After the panel determines the base term 
through consideration of the matrices and any aggravating or mitigating 
circumstances, it adds terms for personal use of a firearm and for other offenses, 
resulting in a total life term.  (Id., §§ 2285-2289.) 
If the prisoner has already served more time than the total life term 
calculated pursuant to the regulations, the prisoner is to be transferred from prison 
to parole supervision in the community, but the release date may not be earlier 
than the period during which the Board and the Governor may review parole 
decisions, which is described below.  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2289; see, e.g., In 
re Lawrence (2008) 44 Cal.4th 1181, 1199 [appropriate term calculated pursuant 
                                              
14  
Like the regulations related to the criteria and guidelines for the 
consideration of suitability for parole, the regulations related to setting the base 
term and a parole date are divided among articles based upon the crime that is the 
basis of the life sentence.  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2282-2292 [murders 
committed before Nov. 8, 1978, and aggravated kidnapping], 2403-2411 [murders 
committed on or after Nov. 8, 1978, and specified attempted murders], 2423-
2429.1 [habitual offenders sentenced under § 667.7], 2433-2439.1 [sex offenders 
sentenced under § 667.51].)  As in our summary of suitability factors, we cite only 
one set of regulations, those set forth in article 5.  (Id., §§ 2280-2292.) 
29 
to the matrices was less than half of the prisoner‟s nearly 24 years in prison]; In re 
Bush (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 133, 138-139 [prisoner whose base term was 
12 years six months had custody credits exceeding 20 years when he was found 
suitable for parole]; see also Cal. Criminal Law:  Procedure and Practice 
(Cont.Ed.Bar 2011) § 47.46, p. 1555 [“It is very common that when a lifer is 
found suitable, he or she has already served time under the appropriate matrix”].)  
If the prisoner has not yet served the appropriate term calculated pursuant to the 
regulations, a proposed release date will be set.  If that date is 10 months or longer 
after the hearing at which the prisoner is found suitable for parole, a progress 
hearing will be held a specified number of months before the parole date, to 
determine whether the parole date should be advanced based upon good conduct in 
prison.  (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2269.)   
The proposed decision becomes final 120 days after the hearing.  During 
the 120-day period, the Board may review the decision.  (§ 3041, subd. (b).)  “Any 
person on the hearing panel may request review of any decision regarding parole 
for an en banc hearing by the board.”  (§ 3041, subd. (a).)  In addition, by 
regulation, proposed grants of parole and a random sample of proposed denials of 
parole must be reviewed by the Board‟s chief counsel or a designee.  If the chief 
counsel recommends a modification to the decision that is adverse to the prisoner, 
the recommendation “shall be referred to the full board for en banc review.”  (Cal. 
Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2041, subd. (h).)  The chief counsel may also recommend a 
new hearing, but “[n]o proposed decision shall be referred for a new hearing 
without a majority vote of the board following a public hearing.”  (Ibid.)  “The 
panel‟s decision shall become final . . . unless the board finds that the panel made 
an error of law, or that the panel‟s decision was based on an error of fact, or that 
new information should be presented to the board, any of which when corrected or 
considered by the board has a substantial likelihood of resulting in a substantially 
30 
different decision upon a rehearing.”  (§ 3041, subd. (b).)  Unlike the scheme 
considered in Morales, supra, 514 U.S. 499, the current scheme does not have 
provisions for an administrative appeal of a decision denying parole.  (Cal. Code 
Regs., tit. 15, former §§ 2050-2057, repealed in 2004.) 
During the 30-day period following finality of the Board‟s decision, when 
the commitment offense is murder, the Governor “may only affirm, modify, or 
reverse the decision . . . on the basis of the same factors which the [Board] is 
required to consider.”  (Cal. Const., art. V, § 8, subd. (b); see § 3041.2.)  The 
Governor‟s discretion with respect to parole decisions is as broad as the Board‟s 
discretion.  The Governor‟s “decision must reflect an individualized consideration 
of the specified criteria and cannot be arbitrary or capricious,” but “[r]esolution of 
any conflicts in the evidence and the weight to be given the evidence” and “the 
precise manner in which the specified factors relevant to parole suitability are 
considered and balanced lies within the discretion of the Governor . . . .”  
(Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 677.)  “Although „the Governor‟s decision 
must be based upon the same factors that restrict the Board in rendering its parole 
decision‟ [citation], the Governor undertakes an independent, de novo review of 
the inmate‟s suitability for parole [citation].  Thus, the Governor has discretion to 
be „more stringent or cautious‟ in determining whether a defendant poses an 
unreasonable risk to public safety.”  (In re Lawrence, supra, 44 Cal.4th 1181, 
1204.)15   
                                              
15  
In addition to the Governor‟s authority, in the 30 days following finality of 
the Board‟s decision, to reverse grants of parole when the commitment offense is 
murder, the Governor has authority, “[u]p to 90 days prior to a scheduled release 
date, . . . [to] request review of any decision by a parole authority concerning the 
grant or denial of parole to any inmate in a state prison.  The Governor shall state 
the reason or reasons for the request, and whether the request is based on a public 
safety concern, a concern that the gravity of current or past convicted offenses 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
31 
The decisions of the Board and of the Governor are subject to the same 
level of judicial scrutiny:  a court inquires whether there is “some evidence” 
related to the relevant factors that supports the decision.  (Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 
Cal.4th at pp. 658, 667.)  Because “the fundamental consideration in parole 
decisions is public safety” (In re Lawrence, supra, 44 Cal.4th at p. 1205), “the 
relevant inquiry is whether some evidence supports the decision of the Board or 
the Governor that the inmate constitutes a current threat to public safety, and not 
merely whether some evidence confirms the existence of certain factual findings.”  
(Id. at p. 1212.)  “It is settled that under the „some evidence‟ standard, „[o]nly a 
modicum of evidence is required.  Resolution of any conflicts in the evidence and 
the weight to be given the evidence are matters within the authority of [the Board 
or] the Governor. . . .  [T]he precise manner in which the specified factors relevant 
to parole suitability are considered and balanced lies within the discretion of [the 
Board or] the Governor . . . .  It is irrelevant that a court might determine that 
evidence in the record tending to establish suitability for parole far outweighs 
evidence demonstrating unsuitability for parole.  As long as the . . . decision 
reflects due consideration of the specified factors as applied to the individual 
prisoner in accordance with applicable legal standards, the court‟s review is 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
may have been given inadequate consideration, or on other factors.  When a 
request has been made, the request shall be reviewed by a majority of 
commissioners specifically appointed to hear adult parole matters and who are 
holding office at the time.  In case of a review, a vote in favor of parole by a 
majority of the commissioners reviewing the request shall be required to grant 
parole to any inmate.  In carrying out any review, the board shall comply with the 
provisions of this chapter.”  (§ 3041.1.) 
32 
limited to ascertaining whether there is some evidence in the record that supports 
the . . . decision.‟  [Citations.]”   (In re Shaputis (2011) 53 Cal.4th 192, 210.) 
2.  Analysis 
a.  Facial challenge 
With this background, we consider whether Marsy‟s Law “creates a 
significant risk of prolonging [Vicks‟s] incarceration.”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. 
at p. 251; see also Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at p. 509 [“we must determine 
whether it produces a sufficient risk of increasing the measure of punishment 
attached to the covered crimes”].)  Marsy‟s Law did not change the timing of the 
first parole suitability hearing, the factors to be considered in deciding whether a 
prisoner is suitable for parole, the criteria for setting a parole date once a prisoner 
is found suitable for parole, or the standard of review of parole decisions.  As 
explained above, Marsy‟s Law eliminated the requirement that Vicks‟s next parole 
hearing be set annually or deferred at most up to two years if it was not reasonable 
to expect that the prisoner would be suitable for parole within a year.  Instead, 
Marsy‟s Law prohibits the Board, at the time that a prisoner is found unsuitable 
for parole, from setting a parole hearing sooner than three years after the finding 
of unsuitability, and mandates that it set the parole hearing 15 years after the 
finding of unsuitability, “unless the board finds by clear and convincing evidence 
that the criteria relevant to the setting of parole release dates . . . are such that 
consideration of the public and victim‟s safety does not require a more lengthy 
period of incarceration for the prisoner than 10 additional years.”  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (b)(3)(A).)  If the board makes such a finding, the next hearing shall be in 
10 years, unless the board finds by clear and convincing evidence that a period of 
more than seven years is not required.  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)(B).)  In that event, 
the next hearing shall be in seven, five, or three years.  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)(C).) 
33 
These changes exceed the revisions considered in Morales, supra, 514 U.S. 
499.  The provisions of Marsy‟s Law apply to all life prisoners, whereas the new 
parole provisions in Morales applied only to those who had killed more than one 
person, “a class of prisoners for whom the likelihood of release on parole is quite 
remote.”  (Morales, supra, at p. 510.)  Marsy‟s Law also deprives the Board of 
discretion at the outset to schedule the next parole hearing in less than three years, 
whereas the amendments considered in Morales retained the one-year deferral 
period unless the Board found that it was not reasonable to expect that the prisoner 
would be suitable for parole in a year.  In addition to shifting the presumption 
from the shorter deferral period to a longer deferral period, Marsy‟s Law imposes 
a heightened evidentiary standard upon the Board that must be met before it may 
initially schedule a hearing sooner than the default period of 15 years.   
As we have noted, however, in Garner, supra, 529 U.S. 244, the Supreme 
Court rejected the prisoner‟s focus on the differences between the changes 
considered in Morales and the changes in Georgia‟s parole scheme challenged in 
Garner.  “These differences are not dispositive.  The question is whether the 
amended Georgia Rule creates a significant risk of prolonging [the prisoner‟s] 
incarceration.”  (Garner, supra, at p. 251.)  The high court recognized that the 
broad discretion associated with the function of determining when a prisoner may 
be released on parole encompasses discretion “to change and adapt based on 
experience.”  (Id. at p. 253.)  Thus, the issue is not whether the manner in which 
discretion is exercised has been changed but whether, “in the period between 
parole reviews, [discretion] will not be exercised at all.”  (Id. at p. 254.)  
Therefore, we focus on whether the changes in the hearing schedule effected by 
Marsy‟s Law create a significant risk that there will be a period between parole 
reviews when the elimination of a hearing that would have been required under the 
former law creates a significant risk of prolonging incarceration.   
34 
We begin with the increase in the minimum period between regularly 
scheduled parole hearings.  The Board has no discretion, at the time parole is 
denied, to schedule the next hearing as early as had been allowed by the statutory 
scheme in effect at the time Vicks committed his crimes.  Marsy‟s Law does, 
however, give the Board unfettered discretion to advance the date of the next 
parole hearing “when a change in circumstances or new information establishes a 
reasonable likelihood that consideration of the public and victim‟s safety does not 
require the additional period of incarceration of the prisoner provided” by the 
statutory deferral periods.  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(4).)  These provisions reflect a 
judgment that the previous schedule for parole hearings had been overly optimistic 
with respect to the speed with which prisoners become suitable for parole.  Rather 
than assuming that all prisoners may become suitable for parole within a shorter 
period of time, Marsy‟s Law assumes otherwise and takes a “wait and see” 
approach.  Rather than requiring earlier hearings in all cases regardless of whether 
there is a reasonable likelihood the prisoner will be suitable for parole, it 
authorizes earlier hearings only if there is a reasonable likelihood the prisoner no 
longer poses a threat to society.  
The Court of Appeal viewed the authority of the Board to advance hearings 
sua sponte as inadequate to prevent longer periods of incarceration.  In its view, 
“[b]ecause there is no mechanism by which the [Board] might sua sponte generate 
new information, or any mechanism by which the [Board] might sua sponte learn 
of either new information or changed circumstances on which it might act, an 
inmate who would have obtained a new hearing as early as one year after his or 
her last hearing must now wait a minimum of three years before obtaining a new 
hearing.  Thus, although sua sponte advanced hearings are nominally available, it 
appears „the rule‟s practical implementation . . . will result in a longer period of 
incarceration than under the earlier rule‟ (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 255) 
35 
because of the absence of any practical method for triggering this advanced 
hearing.”   
The portion of Garner‟s analysis on which the Court of Appeal relied 
relates to a claim that a change in the law, as applied, creates a significant risk of 
prolonged incarceration.  In connection with a facial challenge, Garner identified 
the inquiry as whether the requisite risk was “inherent in the framework” of the 
amended scheme.  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 251.)  If the risk is not inherent 
in the new scheme, then the risk must be “demonstrated on the record.”  (Ibid.)  In 
reiterating these two steps of the analysis, the court stated that “[w]hen the 
[amended scheme] does not by its own terms show a significant risk, the 
[challenger] must demonstrate, by evidence drawn from the rule‟s practical 
implementation by the agency charged with exercising discretion, that its 
retroactive application will result in a longer period of incarceration than under the 
earlier [scheme].”  (Id. at p. 255.)  Thus, in considering a facial challenge, the 
court‟s focus is on any risk inherent in the statutory scheme rather than on the 
practical implementation of the scheme.  Therefore, in Garner, the court identified 
as an important aspect of Georgia‟s scheme “the Board‟s policies [permitting] 
„expedited parole reviews in the event of a change in their circumstance or where 
the Board receives new information that would warrant a sooner review‟ ” (id. at 
p. 254), but in connection with its facial review, the court did not evaluate whether 
there were mechanisms that would ensure the Board would become aware of 
changed circumstances or new information that might give rise to expedited parole 
reviews. 
Here, the Board has not described to this court any policies or practices it 
follows with respect to the exercise of its authority to advance hearings, and 
counsel were unaware at oral argument of any policies or practices related to the 
Board‟s authority.  As explained below, however, our review of the new statutory 
36 
provisions leads us to conclude that the scheme may function in a manner that 
mitigates the risk that the Board will fail to exercise its discretion at a point in time 
when it might have exercised its discretion under the prior scheme and concluded 
that a prisoner was suitable for parole.  Therefore, we conclude that a significant 
risk of prolonging incarceration “is not inherent in the framework” of the parole 
system as amended by Marsy‟s Law.  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 251.)   
First, although Marsy‟s Law does not require an internal review or 
evaluation of whether there is a reasonable probability that a prisoner has become 
suitable for parole at some interim point in the lengthier deferral period, implicit in 
the Board‟s authority to grant parole (§ 3040) and its authority to advance the date 
of the next parole suitability hearing “when a change in circumstances or new 
information establishes a reasonable likelihood that consideration of the public and 
victim‟s safety does not require the additional period of incarceration of the 
prisoner provided” (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(4)), is the authority to direct its staff to 
review a particular prisoner‟s circumstances at any time to determine if there is a 
reasonable likelihood the prisoner is suitable for parole.  For example, if the panel 
is of the view that the prisoner may be suitable for parole in one year, it may direct 
staff to conduct an internal review at a future date to determine whether a change 
in circumstances — which may relate solely to the passage of time — establishes a 
reasonable likelihood that further incarceration is not required to protect the 
public.16  (See In re Lawrence, supra, 44 Cal.4th at pp. 1219-1220 [“the 
                                              
16  
Under the former law, when the Board deferred a hearing for five years, a 
deputy commissioner was required to review the prisoner‟s central file within 
three years, and could order that the next hearing be held within one year.  
(§ 3041.5, former subd. (b)(2)(B); Stats. 1994, ch. 560, § 1, p. 2834; Cal. Code 
Regs, tit. 15, § 2270, subd. (d); see Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 3000 [“central file” 
is “a master file maintained by the department containing records regarding each 
person committed to its jurisdiction”]; see Cal. Department of Corrections and 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
37 
Legislature considered the passage of time — and the attendant changes in a 
prisoner‟s maturity, understanding, and mental state — to be highly probative to 
the determination of current dangerousness”].)  Similarly, if the factors preventing 
a finding of suitability may be amenable to correction in a short period of time, 
such as inadequacies in a prisoner‟s parole plans, the panel may direct that if 
information is received reflecting that such factors have been addressed, an 
internal review must be conducted to determine whether the change in 
circumstances establishes a reasonable likelihood that further incarceration is not 
required.   
Second, “[a]n inmate may request that the board exercise its discretion to 
advance a hearing . . . to an earlier date, by submitting a written request to the 
board . . . which shall set forth the change in circumstances or new information 
that establishes a reasonable likelihood that consideration of the public safety does 
not require the additional period of incarceration of the inmate.”  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (d)(1).)  This provision allows the prisoner to bring to the Board‟s attention 
changes that may warrant an earlier hearing.  As explained above, a prisoner may 
file his or her first petition any time after the denial of parole at a regularly 
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
Rehabilitation Operations Manual, ch. 7, art. 5, pp. 607-608, 
 [description of contents of central file] [as of 
Mar. 4, 2013].) 
 
Under Marsy‟s Law, the Board may identify cases in which interim review 
of the prisoner‟s central file would be appropriate, and thereby may concentrate its 
resources on cases in which there is a possibility of release on parole.  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (b)(4); see Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 254 [Georgia parole board‟s policy 
of deferring review for eight years when it is not reasonable to expect that parole 
would be granted sooner allows the board to concentrate its efforts on cases in 
which there is a good possibility of release on parole].) 
38 
scheduled hearing, and then may file a petition every three years.  (See ante, 
pp. 12-13.) 
In connection with either of these two routes to earlier consideration of 
suitability, if the Board concludes that there is not a reasonable likelihood that the 
prisoner will be suitable for parole earlier, the hearing will not be advanced and 
the prisoner might be deprived of a hearing to which he or she would have been 
entitled under prior law.  In light of the Board‟s conclusion that there is not a 
reasonable likelihood of suitability, however, and given the Board‟s very broad 
discretion to resolve the issue of suitability, the prisoner will not thereby be 
deprived of an earlier release date. 
There remains a possibility that there will be prisoners who become 
suitable for parole and are precluded from petitioning for an advanced hearing 
because less than three years has passed since the prisoner‟s last request.17  We do 
not find that this possibility creates a significant risk of prolonging a prisoner‟s 
incarceration.  Most of the circumstances relevant to suitability for parole in 
California are not of a type amenable to rapid change.  Many of the circumstances 
relate to historical events such as the circumstances of the crime, including actions 
toward the victim during and after its commission, the prisoner‟s previous record, 
                                              
17  
In considering this possibility, we do not mean to suggest that 
communications with the Board concerning a prisoner‟s suitability for parole are 
barred during the three-year intervals between petitions to advance.  Although 
Marsy‟s Law limits the frequency with which a prisoner may file a formal petition 
to advance a hearing, it does not prohibit other communications with the Board.  If 
a significant change relevant to a prisoner‟s suitability for parole occurs at a time 
when the prisoner is precluded from filing another petition to advance the hearing, 
the prisoner or any other person may convey the information to the Board.  
Because the Board has discretion at any time to advance the hearing based on a 
change in circumstances or new information, it may advance a hearing in response 
to such communications. 
39 
and the prisoner‟s history of relationships.  The Board also considers factors such 
as the prisoner‟s understanding of the nature and magnitude of the crime, the 
prisoner‟s age, the prisoner‟s development of marketable skills, the prisoner‟s 
activities in prison, and the prisoner‟s plans for employment and residence.  At the 
time the Board determines that a prisoner is not suitable for parole, it is able to 
evaluate what further period of time will be required to overcome whatever 
deficits the Board has identified with respect to suitability.  If the Board believes 
the deficits require less than three years to overcome, the Board may direct, as 
discussed above, that there be an internal review earlier than the next scheduled 
hearing to determine whether there is a reasonable likelihood the prisoner will be 
found suitable for parole.  If the Board, which has almost unlimited discretion to 
resolve the issue of suitability, is of the view at the time it denies parole that the 
deficits require three or more years to remedy, it is unlikely that there will come a 
time between the denial of a request to advance a hearing and the next scheduled 
hearing, or during the three years until the next request to advance may be filed, 
that a prisoner will become suitable for parole.  (See Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at 
p. 255 [rejecting “the Court of Appeals‟ supposition that [the change in Georgia‟s 
parole procedures] „seems certain‟ to result in some prisoners serving extended 
periods of incarceration. . . .  Morales requires a more rigorous analysis of the 
level of risk”].)18 
                                              
18  
Because of differences among different panels of commissioners, there is 
some possibility that a prisoner‟s chance of being found suitable for parole is 
enhanced by more frequent parole hearings, which increase the chance that the 
prisoner will be considered by a more sympathetic panel.  In rejecting judicial 
“micromanagement of an endless array of legislative adjustments to parole and 
sentencing procedures” in Morales, the high court identified “changes to the 
membership of the Board” as an “innocuous adjustment[].”  (Morales, supra, 514 
U.S. at p. 508; see Gilman v. Davis (E.D.Cal. 2010) 690 F.Supp.2d 1105, 1121, 
 
(Footnote continued on next page.) 
40 
The Board‟s authority to advance a hearing when there is a reasonable 
likelihood the prisoner will be found suitable for parole creates a scheme that is 
similar in substance to the scheme considered in Garner, supra, 529 U.S. 244, 
which was found not to violate ex post facto principles.  As noted above, 
Georgia‟s law vested its parole board with discretion to defer the next hearing for 
any period up to eight years, rather than the previous deferral period of three years, 
and Georgia‟s parole board‟s policies authorized “ „expedited parole reviews in 
the event of a change in their circumstance or where the Board receives new 
information that would warrant a sooner review.‟ ”  (Id. at p. 254.)  The high court 
observed that “[t]hese qualifications permit a more careful and accurate exercise 
of the discretion the Board has had from the outset.  Rather than being required to 
review cases pro forma, the Board may set reconsideration dates according to the 
likelihood that a review will result in meaningful consideration as to whether an 
inmate is suitable for release.”  (Ibid.)  The court also noted the board‟s policy to 
defer the next hearing for eight years, rather than the previous deferral period of 
three years, “ „when, in the Board‟s determination, it is not reasonable to expect 
that parole would be granted during the intervening years‟ ” (ibid.), and concluded 
that “[t]he policy enables the Board to put its resources to better use, to ensure that 
those prisoners who should receive parole come to its attention.  By concentrating 
its efforts on those cases identified as having a good possibility of early release, 
the Board‟s Rules might result in the release of some prisoners earlier than would 
have been the case otherwise.”  (Ibid.)   
                                                                                                                                      
 
(Footnote continued from previous page.) 
 
fn. 13 [although changes in the Board may affect the likelihood of release, such 
changes “would not ordinarily constitute an Ex Post Facto violation”].)   
41 
Similarly, Marsy‟s Law frees the Board from pro forma review of cases and 
authorizes advanced review when a change in circumstances or new information 
establishes a reasonable likelihood that the prisoner does not pose a danger to the 
public.  (§ 3041.5, subds. (b)(4), (d)(1).)  We recognize that Garner referred to the 
Georgia parole board‟s discretion at the outset to defer the next hearing for a 
shorter period as an important qualification (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 254), 
and that Marsy‟s Law does not give California‟s Board the same discretion, but 
the absence of such discretion in California‟s system does not introduce a 
significant risk of prolonging incarceration because once the Board sets a date for 
the next hearing in accordance with the requirements of Marsy‟s Law, the Board 
has unfettered discretion to advance the hearing any time new information or a 
change in circumstances indicates that there is a reasonable likelihood the prisoner 
is suitable for parole.  As noted above, the passage of time, during which the 
Board may expect positive changes in the prisoner‟s maturity, understanding, and 
mental state, is a changed circumstance.   
Georgia‟s scheme will result in earlier hearings in cases in which its parole 
board believed at the outset that the prisoner would be suitable for parole at an 
earlier date, even when that prediction is incorrect and the prisoner is not suitable 
for parole at the earlier date, whereas Marsy‟s Law does not afford an earlier 
hearing unless there is a change in circumstances or new information that supports 
holding an earlier hearing.  Each approach affords the prisoner a hearing when it 
appears he or she may be suitable for parole, but California‟s approach will 
eliminate some hearings at which the prisoner would not be found suitable for 
parole.   
For the same reasons, any risk of prolonged incarceration introduced by 
various other changes effected by Marsy‟s Law is mitigated by a prisoner‟s right 
to seek an advanced hearing and the Board‟s discretion to advance a hearing at any 
42 
time a change in circumstances or new information establishes a reasonable 
probability of suitability for parole.  The provisions of Marsy‟s Law that (1) 
increase the maximum deferral period to 15 years, (2) shift the presumption 
regarding whether to set an earlier or later date to favor a longer deferral period, 
and (3) impose a burden of clear and convincing evidence before a hearing may be 
set for a date earlier than 15 years (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)) affect only the date 
scheduled at the time parole is denied.  In cases in which these provisions compel 
the Board to select a deferral period that is longer than the Board believes will 
probably be necessary to overcome the prisoner‟s deficits, the Board may, at the 
time it denies parole, direct staff to conduct an internal review at an earlier date to 
determine whether a change in circumstances establishes a reasonable likelihood 
that further incarceration is not required to protect the public.  In cases in which 
the Board selects a long deferral period with no expectation that the prisoner will 
be suitable for parole at an earlier date, the prisoner may bring changed 
circumstances and new information to the Board‟s attention every three years.  In 
the latter cases, given that the Board, in the exercise of its very broad discretion, 
has determined that a long period of additional incarceration will be required, and 
given the nature of the criteria related to suitability for parole, many of which are 
not amenable to rapid change, it is highly unlikely that a prisoner will become 
suitable for parole in a shorter period than the three years between applications to 
advance the hearing. 
These provisions requiring the Board to choose a longer deferral period are 
similar to the Georgia parole board‟s policy to defer reconsideration for the 
maximum period allowed under the new law (eight years rather than the prior 
three years) “ „when, in the Board‟s determination, it is not reasonable to expect 
that parole would be granted during the intervening years.‟ ”  (Garner, supra, 529 
U.S. at p. 254.)  Each scheme favors longer deferrals that exceed the maximum 
43 
deferral previously allowed, but each authorizes the advancement of a hearing in 
the event of a change in circumstances or new information.   
Although multiple changes to the parole scheme contribute to longer 
periods between hearings, the changes have no cumulative effect that would create 
a significant risk of prolonged incarceration.  (See Morales, supra, 514 U.S. at 
p. 509; Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 250 [the question of whether a retroactive 
procedural change creates a significant risk of prolonging a prisoner‟s 
incarceration is “ „a matter of “degree” ‟ ”].)  Regardless of whether a hearing is 
deferred for three years or 15 years, the risk that the prisoner will remain 
incarcerated longer than under the prior scheme is mitigated by the Board‟s 
discretion to advance a hearing any time there is a change in circumstances or new 
information.  Although a deferral of 15 years might seem to increase the risk more 
than a deferral of three years, any enhanced risk is mitigated by fact that the 
prisoner may petition every three years to advance the hearing, and the fact that 
the Board, which has broad discretion to determine suitability for parole, has 
determined that a lengthier deferral period is warranted.  The Board‟s 
determination reflects that the factors impeding a finding of suitability for parole 
are not amenable to rapid change, and an earlier hearing will not result in a finding 
of suitability for parole. 
Vicks raises several other arguments, in addition to those based on Morales 
and Garner.  First, he contends that a parole hearing “affects a critical stage of the 
criminal process, the sentencing phase of a criminal case,” and that by imposing 
the clear and convincing burden of proof before the Board may impose a deferral 
period of less than 15 years, Marsy‟s Law “imposes an unlawful shifting of the 
burden of proof to the defense at a critical stage of the criminal proceedings.”  He 
cites three cases in support of his conclusion.  In People v. Doolin (2009) 45 
Cal.4th 390, 453, we acknowledged that sentencing is a critical stage in a criminal 
44 
prosecution.  In In re Roberts (2005) 36 Cal.4th 575, 589-590, in the course of 
analyzing whether a petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging the denial of a 
parole date should be filed in the county in which the prisoner is incarcerated or 
the county in which the prisoner was sentenced, we observed that “a sentence 
contemplates a period of parole, which in that respect is related to the sentence,” 
and that “the objectives of sentencing and parole are related . . . .”  (Id. at p. 590.)  
Finally, in Santosky v. Kramer (1982) 455 U.S. 745, the high court explained that 
the government‟s burden of proof is heightened when it seeks to deprive a party of 
liberty or life, and it held that the due process clause requires the state to establish 
by clear and convincing evidence the facts required to support an order 
terminating parental rights.  Certainly, in the criminal proceeding that concluded 
with defendant‟s conviction and sentence, the government bore the burden of 
proving beyond a reasonable doubt the facts underlying the conviction and 
sentence, but none of the authorities he cites support the proposition that the 
determination of the initial deferral period at a hearing at which parole is denied is 
a critical stage of criminal proceedings, or that altering the burden of proof 
associated with the decision concerning the timing of the next parole hearing 
violates ex post facto principles.   
Vicks also contends that the changes enacted by Marsy‟s Law violate the ex 
post facto clause because they “lead to more onerous results than under the prior 
law.”  The authorities he cites, which we summarize below, involve substantive 
changes in the scheme for calculating the time to be served.  In contrast, Marsy‟s 
Law alters only the procedure by which the date of the next parole hearing is set, 
and it allows the date to be changed whenever there is a reasonable probability that 
the prisoner may be found suitable for parole; it does not alter the calculation of 
the sentence, the calculation of credits, the criteria relevant to the determination of 
45 
suitability for parole, or the criteria relevant to the determination of the parole date 
once a prisoner is found suitable for parole.   
In Weaver v. Graham, supra, 450 U.S. 24, the state reduced the rate at 
which the prisoner accumulated credit for good behavior in prison.  Although the 
new law included provisions pursuant to which a prisoner could earn discretionary 
credit, “the new provision constrict[ed] the inmate‟s opportunity to earn early 
release, and thereby [made] more onerous the punishment for crimes committed 
before its enactment.”  (Id. at pp. 35-36.)  Marsy‟s Law does not alter the 
standards for earning release on parole.  
In Miller v. Florida, supra, 482 U.S. 423, the presumptive sentencing range 
was increased between the time that the defendant committed his offenses and the 
time he was sentenced to seven years in prison.  To have imposed a seven-year 
sentence under the prior scheme, the judge would have been required to provide 
clear and convincing reasons for varying from the presumptive sentence range, 
and the decision to depart from the presumptive range would have been 
reviewable on appeal.  Under the new scheme, the seven-year sentence could be 
imposed without providing any reasons, and the decision was not reviewable on 
appeal.  (Id. at pp. 432-433.)  The court acknowledged that “no ex post facto 
violation occurs if the change in the law is merely procedural and does „not 
increase the punishment, nor change the ingredients of the offence or the ultimate 
facts necessary to establish guilt‟ ” (id. at p. 433), but found that the revised 
guidelines did not merely change the procedure for arriving at a sentence, they 
increased the “ „quantum of punishment‟ ” for defendant‟s crimes.  (Id. at p. 434.)  
Marsy‟s Law, however, changes the procedures for scheduling hearings, but does 
not change the standards that determine eligibility for release on parole. 
In Himes v. Thompson (9th Cir. 2003) 336 F.3d 848, the court considered a 
change in the law governing the rerelease of a prisoner after parole has been 
46 
revoked.  The new law required the parole board, in cases in which it found 
“aggravation” in connection with the prisoner‟s violation of parole, to deny 
rerelease and to require the prisoner to serve the remainder of the term, twenty-
nine and a half years in Himes‟s case.  The prior law had given the board 
discretion to choose from a continuum of terms when it found aggravation, 
“anywhere from a few months to the entirety of the prison term.  For prisoners like 
Himes, for whom the remaining prison term was quite lengthy, the Board of 
Parole [under the prior law] would likely have imposed the entire prison term only 
under extraordinary circumstances.  So the change in regulatory regime, viewed in 
its entirety, significantly increased the possibility of serving a lengthy re-
incarceration period under the new regime.”  (Id. at pp. 859-860.)  Therefore, the 
change in the law “created a significant risk of a more onerous sentence.”  (Id. at 
p. 855.)  Marsy‟s Law does not constrain the Board‟s authority to set a parole date 
at whatever point in time the prisoner is suitable for parole. 
Vicks notes that, in addition to increasing the potential deferral period, 
shifting the presumption to favor a longer deferral period, and imposing a “clear 
and convincing” evidentiary burden to deferring a hearing for fewer than 15 years, 
Marsy‟s Law requires the Board to “consider[] the views and interests of the 
victim” (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)) before exercising its discretion to select the proper 
deferral period or to advance a hearing date.  (Id., subd. (b)(4).)  He characterizes 
this requirement as permitting victims “a say” in the frequency of parole hearings, 
and as incorporating public outcry into the equation that determines when a 
prisoner will be found suitable for parole.  (See In re Dannenberg (2009) 173 
Cal.App.4th 237, 255, fn. 5 [rejecting the Governor‟s reliance on the district 
attorney‟s opinion that the prisoner lacked insight; the district attorney‟s and the 
Governor‟s opinions are not evidence regarding suitability for parole]; In re 
Weider (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 570, 590 [family‟s statements may influence the 
47 
weight the Board gives to the evidence, but opposition of victim‟s next of kin is 
not evidence of unsuitability for parole].) 
The parole scheme has long required consideration of the victim‟s views in 
connection with the Board‟s evaluation of a prisoner‟s suitability for parole.  In 
1982, prior to Vicks‟s crimes, the voters approved Proposition 8, The Victims‟ 
Bill of Rights.  Among the provisions Proposition 8 enacted was section 3043, 
which gives victims “the right to appear, personally or by counsel, at the [parole 
suitability] hearing and to adequately and reasonably express his, her, or their 
views concerning the prisoner and the case, including, but not limited to the 
commitment crimes, determinate term commitment crimes for which the prisoner 
has been paroled, any other felony crimes or crimes against the person for which 
the prisoner has been convicted, the effect of the enumerated crimes on the victim 
and the family of the victim, the person responsible for these enumerated crimes, 
and the suitability of the prisoner for parole.”  (§ 3043, subd. (b)(1).)  As enacted 
in 1982, section 3043 also provided that “[t]he board, in deciding whether to 
release the person on parole, shall consider the statements of victims and next of 
kin . . . .”  Marsy‟s Law amended section 3043 to require that “[t]he board, in 
deciding whether to release the person on parole, shall consider the entire and 
uninterrupted statements of victims or victims, next of kin, immediate family 
members of the victim, and the designated representatives of the victim or next of 
kin . . . .”  (§ 3043, subd. (d), Stats. 2004, ch. 289, § 1.) 
In light of the fact that the Board is required to consider the victim‟s views 
in deciding whether to find a prisoner suitable for parole, the addition of a 
requirement that the Board consider the victim‟s views before deciding the initial 
date set for the next parole hearing, and before deciding whether new information 
or circumstances establish a reasonable likelihood the prisoner will be suitable for 
parole at an earlier date, does not create a significant risk of prolonging the 
48 
prisoner‟s incarceration.  Moreover, to the extent victims provide information or 
argument relevant to the express issue of safety and thus suitability for parole, 
their participation simply provides another source of information for the Board to 
consider.  Finally, to the extent Marsy‟s Law requires the Board to consider 
statements that may not be relevant to its decision, we assume the Board will base 
its decisions on appropriate grounds.  
With respect to the possibility that, in some cases, the Board will be 
required to consider statements that are not relevant to the criteria that guide the 
Board‟s exercise of its discretion in setting the deferral period or advancing a 
hearing date, we note that the Board‟s receipt of such statements serves a purpose.  
One of the principal purposes of Marsy‟s Law is to provide victims “due process” 
by affording them an opportunity to be heard in proceedings concerning the 
prosecution, punishment, and release of those who victimized them.  (Prop. 9, 
Findings, ¶ 1 West‟s Ann. Cal. Const., supra, at p. 9; id., Purposes, ¶ 1.)  Its 
provisions are intended to “ensur[e] that crime victims are treated with respect and 
dignity . . . .”  (Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (a)(2).)  We have recognized similar 
rights in the context of an individual‟s due process liberty interest in being free 
from arbitrary adjudicative procedures.  (People v. Ramirez (1979) 25 Cal.3d 260, 
264.)  We noted in Ramirez “the important due process interest in recognizing the 
dignity and worth of the individual by treating him as an equal, fully participating 
and responsible member of society.  [Citations.]  „For government to dispose of a 
person‟s significant interests without offering him a chance to be heard is to risk 
treating him as a nonperson, an object, rather than a respected, participating 
citizen.‟  [Citation.]  Thus, even in cases in which the decision-making procedure 
will not alter the outcome of governmental action, due process may nevertheless 
require that certain procedural protections be granted the individual in order to 
protect important dignitary values, or, in other words, „to ensure that the method of 
49 
interaction itself is fair in terms of what are perceived as minimum standards of 
political accountability — of modes of interaction which express a collective 
judgment that human beings are important in their own right, and that they must 
be treated with understanding, respect, and even compassion.‟  [Citation.]”  (Id. at 
pp. 267-268.)  The same sentiments are evident in the provisions of Marsy‟s Law 
that seek to ensure that crime victims are treated with dignity.  As in the context of 
adjudication of liberty interests, it is not critical that a victim‟s participation be 
relevant to the ultimate decision; rather, what is important is that the victim be 
acknowledged and respected.  In doing so, the scheme does not authorize the 
Board to base its decisions on victims‟ opinions or public outcry. 
Vicks also identifies various alleged flaws in the procedures for advancing 
a hearing.  First, he notes that the Board requires a prisoner to provide copies of 
documentation in support of a petition to advance a hearing.  He states that “the 
passage of time is itself a change in circumstances that may affect a prisoner‟s 
suitability for parole,” citing In re Lawrence, supra, 44 Cal.4th 1181, and that 
“this change would be present in every case, and cannot itself be documented.”  
The Board‟s form for petitioning to advance a hearing date states:  “Attach a copy 
of the supporting document(s) such as support letters, job offers, and vocational or 
educational certificates.”  (Bd. Parole Hearings, Petition, supra, p. 1, original 
boldface;  [as of Mar. 4, 2013].)  The form merely 
informs the prisoner to provide copies rather than originals of documentation; it 
does not establish that a hearing cannot be advanced without documentation from 
the prisoner.   
Second, he observes that the Board‟s form does not identify guidelines the 
Board will follow in resolving a petition, and asserts that “the Board has no 
standards whatsoever that it must follow in assessing a 1045(A) Petition, and 
50 
apparently can deny it solely because the victim or victim‟s next of kin objects, 
without regard to how the changed circumstances actually impact the sole relevant 
issue, whether the inmate remains dangerous.”  The standards applicable to the 
Board‟s assessment of a prisoner‟s petition are set forth in section 3041.5 and are 
based on long-established principles governing the Board‟s discretion.  The Board 
evaluates a petition to determine whether it “set[s] forth [a] change in 
circumstances or new information that establishes a reasonable likelihood that 
consideration of the public safety does not require the additional period of 
incarceration . . . .”  (§ 3041.5, subd. (d)(1).)  Whether there is a reasonable 
likelihood that the prisoner is suitable for parole is evaluated by considering the 
suitability criteria set forth in section 3041 and the Board‟s regulations.  (Cal. 
Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2281, subds. (c), (d).)  As explained above, the Board applies 
these criteria to “attempt to predict by subjective analysis whether the inmate will 
be able to live in society without committing additional antisocial acts.  [Citation.]  
„The [Board‟s] exercise of its broad discretion “involves the deliberate assessment 
of a wide variety of individualized factors on a case-by-case basis, and the striking 
of a balance between the interests of the inmate and of the public.”  [Citation.]‟  
[Citation.]”  (Rosenkrantz, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 655.)  If the change in 
circumstances or new information establishes that there is no longer an evidentiary 
basis for concluding the prisoner is a current threat to public safety, the Board will 
abuse its discretion if it declines to advance the hearing date and find the prisoner 
suitable for parole.  If, however, there is some evidence to support a conclusion 
that the prisoner continues to pose a threat to public safety, it is within the Board‟s 
broad discretion to decide whether the “change in circumstances or new 
information establishes a reasonable likelihood that consideration of the public and 
victim‟s safety does not require the additional period of incarceration . . . .”  
(§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(4).)   
51 
Third, he notes that under the former law, when the Board deferred a 
hearing for five years, a deputy commissioner was required to review the 
prisoner‟s central file within three years, and could then order that the next hearing 
be held within one year.  (§ 3041.5, former subd. (b)(2)(B); Stats. 1994, ch. 560, 
§ 1, p. 2834.)  The absence of a mandatory interim review of the prisoner‟s file 
within three years does not introduce a significant risk that a prisoner‟s 
incarceration will be prolonged.  Under Marsy‟s Law, the prisoner has a right to 
bring new information or a change in circumstances to the attention of the Board 
any time within the first three years following the denial of parole.  (§ 3041.5, 
subd. (d).)  Thus, the new procedure allows more information to be brought to the 
attention of the Board within the same or a shorter period of time. 
b.  Challenge to the law as applied to Vicks 
In addition to his facial challenge, Vicks contends Marsy‟s Law violates ex 
post facto principles as applied to him.  As noted above, Garner recognized that 
“[w]hen the [amended scheme] does not by its own terms show a significant risk, 
the [challenger] must demonstrate, by evidence drawn from the rule‟s practical 
implementation by the agency charged with exercising discretion, that its 
retroactive application will result in a longer period of incarceration than under the 
earlier [scheme].”  (Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 255.)  As explained below, 
Vicks has not established that Marsy‟s Law has created a significant risk of 
prolonging his incarceration. 
Vicks contends that the Board‟s deferral of his next hearing for five years, 
instead of the maximum two-year deferral he would have received under prior 
law, reflects a “lost opportunity” to serve less time, and that such lost opportunity 
establishes a violation of the ex post facto clause.  He cites Weaver v. Graham, 
supra, 450 U.S. 24, which held that a reduction in the rate at which the prisoner 
52 
accumulated credit for good behavior in prison and the addition of a means to earn 
discretionary credit “constrict[ed] the inmate‟s opportunity to earn early release, 
and thereby [made] more onerous the punishment for crimes committed before its 
enactment.”  (Id. at pp. 35-36.)  In contrast to the change considered in Weaver, 
Marsy‟s Law did not alter the criteria for obtaining release.  By reducing the 
frequency of hearings at the outset and allowing the advancement of a hearing date 
“when a change in circumstances or new information establishes a reasonable 
likelihood that consideration of the public and victim‟s safety does not require the 
additional period of incarceration of the prisoner” (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(4)), 
Marsy‟s Law affords prisoners an opportunity to have their suitability for parole 
considered when there is a reasonable likelihood they are suitable.  Vicks does not 
indicate that he has requested an advanced hearing date or that there is any 
changed circumstance or new information that would support a conclusion that 
there is a reasonable likelihood he is suitable for parole.  Thus, it does not appear 
that he has lost an opportunity to serve less time due to the longer delay before his 
next parole suitability hearing.  
We further note that Vicks has not been prejudiced by the fact that the 
Board lacks discretion initially to set a hearing earlier than three years after the 
denial of parole.  Under Marsy‟s Law, if the Board makes a finding by clear and 
convincing evidence that a deferral period of more than seven years is not 
required, the Board has discretion to schedule the next hearing in seven, five, or 
three years; there is no additional finding required to set the next hearing for three 
rather than five years later.  (§ 3041.5, subd. (b)(3)(C).)  The fact that the Board 
deferred Vicks‟s hearing for five years, despite its discretion to set the hearing for 
three years, establishes that it would not have exercised its discretion to set the 
next hearing within the time limits existing under the prior law, even if Marsy‟s 
Law afforded the Board the same discretion given Georgia‟s parole board.   
53 
Finally, we note that Vicks has not provided any basis to suspect that, had 
his next hearing been scheduled in accordance with prior law and had he been 
found suitable for parole at that earlier hearing, he would have been released on 
parole.  Vicks began serving his life term on March 13, 2003.  In light of the 
circumstances of his kidnapping offenses, such as the movement of the victims, 
the sexual assaults, and the use of a firearm, it appears under the matrices 
governing the calculation of his base term that he would be required to remain 
incarcerated even if he were found suitable for parole at this time.  (See Cal. Code 
Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2282-2288.) 
Vicks and amicus curiae, the Public Defender for the Eastern District of 
California, seek to expand the challenge in this case to encompass a claim that 
Marsy‟s Law violates ex post facto principles as applied to life prisoners whose 
commitment offenses occurred before the passage of Marsy‟s Law.  Vicks cites an 
article reporting a study of 211 parole hearings held during the period from 2007 
to 2010.  (Richardson, Impact of Marsy‟s Law on Parole in California:  An 
Empirical Study (May 16, 2011), available online at 
 [as of  Mar. 4, 2013].)  He does not address 
the basis on which a court might grant judicial notice of the contents of the article.  
In any event, the conclusions cited concerning the increase that has occurred in the 
average time between the denial of parole and the date set for the next parole 
hearing merely reflect the fact that Marsy‟s Law mandates lengthier deferrals at 
the time parole is denied; these conclusions do not reflect that prisoners are being 
denied parole hearings when there is a reasonable probability they will be suitable 
for parole. 
The federal public defender, joined by Vicks, has requested that this court 
grant judicial notice of four volumes of evidence presented in a class action 
brought on behalf of life prisoners whose commitment offenses occurred before 
54 
the passage of Marsy‟s Law.  (Gilman v. Brown (E.D.Cal. Sept. 7, 2012, CIV. 
No. S-05-830 LKK/GGH) 2012 U.S.Dist. Lexis 127679.)  The proffered evidence 
was presented at an evidentiary hearing in April 2011, and generally concerns the 
Board‟s processing of prisoner requests to advance parole hearings, and statistics 
related to the advancement of parole hearings and the granting or denial of parole.  
The evidence also includes data concerning (1) the rate at which prisoners 
received parole dates following this court‟s decision in In re Lawrence, supra, 44 
Cal.4th 1181, which explained that the modicum of evidence required to support a 
denial of parole must establish not only that the commitment offense was 
particularly egregious, but also that the prisoner currently is dangerous, and (2) the 
results of parole hearings following the stipulation in In re Rutherford (Super Ct. 
Marin County, 2006, No. SC135399A), that those prisoners whose parole 
suitability hearings were overdue on December 15, 2008, were entitled to have 
their parole hearings conducted under the pre-Marsy‟s Law statutory guidelines.  
The public defender contends that “the evidence shows without doubt that the 
result of the [Marsy‟s Law] deferral periods has been to create not only a 
significant risk of increased incarceration for life prisoners but a certainty of 
increased incarceration for many of them.”   
We deny the request for judicial notice for two reasons.  First, most of the 
records are not subject to judicial notice for the purposes they are offered.  The 
public defender proposes that the transcript of the evidentiary hearing and the 41 
exhibits admitted into evidence at the hearing are subject to judicial notice under 
Evidence Code section 452, subdivision (d), which authorizes judicial notice of 
court records.  “The court may in its discretion take judicial notice of any court 
record in the United States.  [Citation.]  This includes any orders, findings of facts 
and conclusions of law, and judgments within court records.  [Citations.]  
However, while courts are free to take judicial notice of the existence of each 
55 
document in a court file, including the truth of results reached, they may not take 
judicial notice of the truth of hearsay statements in decisions and court files.”  
(Lockley v. Law Office of Cantrell, Green, Pekich, Cruz & McCort (2001) 91 
Cal.App.4th 875, 882.)  Here, judicial notice of the contents of the transcript and 
exhibits is sought. 
Second, the evidence the public defender has assembled reflects only the 
beginning of the factfinding process required to determine the impact of Marsy‟s 
Law as applied to prisoners generally.  The federal court in the Gilman litigation 
has appointed a statistician to analyze the evidence, has ordered the plaintiffs to 
present additional evidence beyond the evidence presented at the April 2011 
evidentiary hearing, and has ordered the defendants to produce certain information 
about parole decisions in the years 1991 through 2008.  According to the Attorney 
General, the federal court has made no findings concerning the evidence presented 
in that case.  Thus, even if some of the documents obtained from the Board might 
be subject to judicial notice under Evidence Code section 452, subdivision (c), as 
official acts of an executive agency, such documents are not properly considered 
in isolation and do not establish facts that would allow resolution of the contention 
that Marsy‟s Law has, as applied, prolonged prisoners‟ incarceration.   
Therefore, we decline to consider evidence of the effect of the changes in 
parole procedures on prisoners in general, and we decline the request of Vicks and 
amicus curiae to expand the issues in this proceeding to address whether Marsy‟s 
Law violates ex post facto principles as applied to life prisoners whose 
commitment offenses occurred before the passage of Marsy‟s Law. 
D.  Was Marsy’s Law intended to increase punishment? 
Independent of Vicks‟s contention that Marsy‟s Law creates a significant 
risk of prolonging a prisoner‟s incarceration, he also contends that Marsy‟s Law 
56 
was intended to increase punishment, and for that reason alone violates the ex post 
facto clause.  We disagree, for two reasons.  First, the authority Vicks cites in 
support of the proposition that an intention to increase punishment is, by itself, 
sufficient to establish a violation of the ex post facto clause, is inapposite.  Second, 
none of the provisions of Marsy‟s Law reflects an intent to deny inmates a parole 
date when they are suitable for parole.   
Vicks cites Smith v. Doe (2003) 538 U.S. 84 in support of his view that 
intent alone will establish an ex post facto violation.  Smith considered whether a 
sex offender registration requirement violated the ex post facto clause when 
applied to sex offenders who had committed their offenses prior to the enactment 
of the registration requirement.  Resolution of the issue required a determination 
of whether the registration law was civil or criminal.  The court observed that “[i]f 
the intention of the legislature was to impose punishment, that ends the inquiry.  
If, however, the intention was to enact a regulatory scheme that is civil and 
nonpunitive, we must further examine whether the statutory scheme is „ “so 
punitive either in purpose or effect as to negate [the State‟s] intention” to deem it 
“civil.” ‟  [Citation.]”  (Id. at p. 92.)  Thus, if the legislature intended the new 
registration statute to be punitive rather than regulatory, the statute was criminal, 
and its imposition upon one whose crime was committed prior to the statute‟s 
enactment constituted additional punishment.  It was in this context that the court 
observed that “[a] conclusion that the legislature intended to punish would satisfy 
an ex post facto challenge without further inquiry into its effects . . . .”  (Id. at 
pp. 92-93.)  Smith did not address the issue of whether an intent to increase 
punishment, by itself, constitutes a violation of ex post facto principles, and Vicks 
has cited no case holding that such an intent violates ex post facto principles.  (See 
also Garner, supra, 529 U.S. at p. 262 (dis. opn. of Souter, J.) [acknowledging that 
57 
“we have never decided that a purpose to increase punishment, absent a punitive 
effect, itself invalidates a retroactive policy change”].) 
Even if an intent to increase punishment were sufficient to establish a 
violation of the ex post facto clause, the terms of Marsy‟s Law do not evince an 
intent to increase punishment or to deny inmates parole.  The measure‟s Findings 
and its statement of purposes reflect that the Law‟s principal goals are to grant 
victims of crime the rights to notice and to be heard in the criminal process; to 
promote adequate funding of the justice system so that criminals will be 
prosecuted and punished in a manner that is timely and commensurate with their 
crimes; and to spare victims the ordeal and taxpayers the expense of parole 
hearings when there is no current likelihood that the prisoner will be paroled.  
(Prop. 9, West‟s Ann. Cal. Const., supra, at p. 9.)  Its references to inadequate 
incarceration relate to issues other than parole, such as an asserted failure to build 
adequate jails and prisons and to effectively prosecute and sentence criminals.  
(Id., Findings, ¶ 4.)  Similarly, its references to “the right to an expeditious and 
just punishment” (id., ¶ 1) and to the “failure to impose actual and just 
punishment” (id., ¶ 9) appear to relate to funding and functioning of the criminal 
justice system which, it states, “has failed to expeditiously finalize the sentences 
and punishments of criminal wrongdoers.  Those criminal wrongdoers are being 
released from custody after serving as little as 10 percent of the sentences imposed 
and determined to be appropriate by judges.”  (Id., ¶ 4.)  This construction is 
supported by the fact that statements that expressly address parole focus on the 
impact that frequent parole hearings have on victims, and on the measure‟s intent 
to eliminate hearings at which there is no likelihood that the prisoner will be found 
suitable for parole.  None of the statements expressly addressing parole indicates a 
desire to extend incarceration despite a prisoner‟s suitability for parole.  (Id., ¶¶ 5, 
6, 8; id., Purposes, ¶ 2.)  Finally, the stated intent “to provide that a convicted 
58 
murderer can receive a parole hearing no more frequently than every three years, 
and can be denied a follow-up parole hearing for as long as 15 years” (id., 
Purposes, ¶ 2) merely states in general terms the change to parole procedures 
proposed by the voter initiative, and does not reflect an intent to deny parole to 
any prisoner who is suitable for parole under the law. 
The provisions that Marsy‟s Law added to the state Constitution concerning 
“the expectation” that criminals will be “tried . . . , sentenced, and sufficiently 
punished” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (a)(4)) and the “right to expect that 
persons convicted of committing criminal acts are sufficiently punished in both the 
manner and the length of the sentences imposed” (id., art. I, § 28, subd. (a)(5)) 
appear to relate to the enforcement of the Penal Code, the sentence imposed and 
the stated concern that inadequate prison capacity and ineffective prosecutions 
result in insufficient punishment.  This relationship is apparent in section 28, 
subdivision (a)(5)‟s reference to “the manner and the length of the sentences 
imposed,” and is also reflected in the fact that the expectations set forth in section 
28, subdivision (a)(4) parallel the concerns expressed in the measure‟s Findings 
regarding asserted failures in the criminal justice system with respect to prison 
capacity and prosecutions.  (See Prop. 9, Findings, ¶ 4, West‟s Ann. Cal. Const., 
supra, at p. 9.)   
In contrast, perceived flaws in the parole process are addressed in a 
different subpart of subdivision (a) (see Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (a)(6)), and 
the concerns and proposed solutions that are related to parole procedures are silent 
with respect to the sufficiency of punishment.  Instead, the statements addressing 
parole focus on the impact of frequent parole hearings on victims, an impact that 
results from a system that affords multiple hearings during a period in which the 
prisoner is not suitable for parole.  Thus, the concerns and solutions related to 
parole are directed to reducing the number and frequency of hearings at which 
59 
parole is denied rather than extending the incarceration of prisoners who are 
suitable for parole. 
Vicks also contends that the statutory amendments, which create “hurdles 
and obstacles for parole eligible life term inmates” by lengthening the default 
deferral period to 15 years and the minimum deferral period to three years, 
demonstrate that Marsy‟s Law is “vindictive legislation.”  To the extent the 
changes intentionally and actually result in less frequent parole hearings, these 
aspects reflect the law‟s stated intent to spare victims of crime and taxpayers the 
burden of parole hearings at which there is no reasonable likelihood that the 
prisoner will be found suitable for parole.  That the changes limit the frequency of 
parole hearings does not reflect an intent to increase punishment or to prolong 
incarceration beyond the time when a prisoner is suitable for parole. 
III.  CONCLUSION 
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the changes to the parole 
process effected by Marsy‟s Law do not, on their face, create a significant risk that 
life prisoners‟ incarceration will be prolonged.  We also reject Vicks‟s contention 
that Marsy‟s Law is invalid as applied to him.  Finally, we decline to undertake an 
analysis of whether Marsy‟s Law violates ex post facto principles as it is being 
applied to life prisoners whose commitment offenses occurred before the passage  
60 
 
of Marsy‟s Law; Vicks did not raise this contention below, and the evidence of 
which he seeks judicial notice does not provide a basis for this court to address the 
issue. 
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed to the extent it vacates the 
Board‟s order deferring Vicks‟s next parole hearing in accordance with the terms 
of Marsy‟s Law.  In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J. 
 
WE CONCUR: 
 
KENNARD, J. 
BAXTER, J. 
WERDEGAR, J. 
CHIN, J. 
CORRIGAN, J. 
LIU, J. 
1 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CONCURRING OPINION BY LIU, J. 
 
 
I join the court‟s opinion and write separately to underscore the limited 
nature of our holding. 
Petitioner‟s primary claim is a facial challenge to the application of 
Marsy‟s Law to prisoners who committed their crimes before the law was enacted.  
Petitioner also contends that the statute violates the ex post facto clauses of the 
federal and state Constitutions as applied to him.  Whether the challenge is on its 
face or as applied, the United States Supreme Court has held that the relevant 
inquiry is not whether differences exist between the prior parole system and the 
current system, but “whether the amended [statute] creates a significant risk of 
prolonging [the prisoner‟s] incarceration.”  (Garner v. Jones (2000) 529 U.S. 244, 
251.)  On a facial challenge, the Garner inquiry requires that this “significant risk” 
be “inherent in the framework” of the amended schedule.  (Id. at p. 251.)  Where 
the statute in question provides the parole board with some discretion, the Garner 
standard by its nature permits — in fact, requires — the reviewing court to 
speculate about possible safety valves consistent with the statutory scheme that 
might mitigate any significant risk of prolonged incarceration. 
Applying this rule, the court today concludes that Marsy‟s Law on its face 
does not create a significant risk of prolonged incarceration.  In reaching this 
conclusion, the court speculates on a variety of ways that the Board of Parole 
Hearings (Board) may exercise its discretion to mitigate the risk of prolonged 
2 
incarceration.  For example, the court says the Board “may” exercise its discretion 
by directing its staff to conduct interim internal reviews when it believes an inmate 
might become parole eligible before his or her next scheduled hearing.  (See, e.g., 
maj. opn., ante, at pp. 36, 39, 42.)  The court also says that if something changes 
to affect an inmate‟s parole eligibility during a period in which he or she is barred 
from submitting a petition for an advanced hearing, the inmate “may” convey the 
information to the Board outside of a formal petition.  (Id. at p. 38, fn. 17.)  
Further, the court says the Board “may” direct staff to conduct an internal review 
upon receipt of any such information.  (Id. at p. 37.) 
All of these possibilities are highly speculative.  But they appear to be 
within the Board‟s authority and discretion, and together they weigh against a 
finding that a significant risk of prolonged incarceration is inherent in Marsy‟s 
Law.  However, the fact that these speculative actions may occur does not imply 
that they do occur in practice.  The Attorney General stated at argument that she 
was not aware of any Board policy or practice of exercising its authority to 
advance a hearing or to direct staff to monitor or internally review parole 
eligibility.  Today‟s opinion acknowledges that no such policy or practice appears 
in the record before us.  (See maj. opn., ante, at p. 35.) 
The court also notes that the risk of prolonged incarceration is further 
mitigated by the fact that many of the factors affecting parole suitability are not 
“amenable to rapid change.”  (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 38, 42, 43.)  I understand this 
to mean it is possible, even if speculative, that the immutability of some parole 
factors (e.g., the circumstances of the crime, the inmate‟s criminal record, and 
other factors concerning the inmate‟s history), together with the posited discretion 
of the Board to respond to factors that may change over time (e.g., a prisoner‟s 
insight into his crime, his activities in prison, his parole plans), suggests that 
Marsy‟s Law does not inherently create a significant risk of prolonged 
3 
incarceration.  However, we have no facts before us to determine, one way or 
another, how rapidly the suitability factors that are amenable to change actually do 
change, or whether the Board actually exercises its discretion to respond to such 
changes. 
With these observations, I join the court‟s limited holding that Marsy‟s Law 
does not violate the ex post facto clauses on its face or as applied to petitioner. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
LIU, J. 
I CONCUR:  WERDEGAR, J. 
 
1 
See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court. 
 
Name of Opinion In re Vicks 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Unpublished Opinion 
Original Appeal 
Original Proceeding 
Review Granted XXX 195 Cal.App.4th 475 
Rehearing Granted 
 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Opinion No. S194129 
Date Filed: March 4, 2013 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Court: Superior 
County: San Diego 
Judge: David M. Gill 
 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
Counsel: 
 
Steven M. Defilippis, under appointment by the Supreme Court, for Petitioner Michael Vicks. 
 
Daniel Broderick, Federal Defender, and Monica Knox, Assistant Federal Defender, as Amici Curiae on 
behalf of Petitioner Michael Vicks. 
 
Edmund G. Brown, Jr., and Kamala D. Harris, Attorneys General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant 
Attorney General, Donald E. de Nicola, Deputy State Solicitor General, Julie L. Garland and Jennifer A. 
Neill, Assistant Attorneys General, Anya M. Binsacca, Phillip Lindsay and Jennifer Gwen Ross, Deputy 
Attorneys General, for Respondent The People. 
 
W. Scott Thorpe; Bonnie M. Dumanis, District Attorney (San Diego), Richard J. Sachs, Deputy District 
Attorney; and Albert C. Locher, Assistant District Attorney (Sacramento), for California District Attorneys 
Association as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Respondent The People. 
 
 
 
2 
 
 
 
 
Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion): 
 
Steven M. Defilippis 
Picone & Defilippis 
625 N. First Street 
San Jose, CA  95112 
(408) 292-0441 
 
Jennifer Gwen Ross 
Deputy Attorney General 
455 Golden Gate Avenue, Suite 11000 
San Francisco, CA  94102-7004 
(415) 703-5774