Court Opinion

ID: 9910196
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-15 05:04:32.125708+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:51:30.950233
License: Public Domain

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
                 revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

                             STATE OF MICHIGAN

                             COURT OF APPEALS

In re Parole of EVANS KARSON, JR.

AK,                                                                 UNPUBLISHED
                                                                    December 14, 2023
               Appellee,

v                                                                   No. 365926
                                                                    Wayne Circuit Court
EVANS KARSON, JR.,                                                  LC No. 21-014726-AP

               Appellant,

and

PAROLE BOARD,

               Intervenor.

Before: LETICA, P.J., and O’BRIEN and CAMERON, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

        Evans Karson, Jr., appeals by leave granted1 the trial court’s order reversing the decision
of the Michigan Parole Board (the Board) to grant parole to Karson. We reverse.

                                       I. BACKGROUND

        On June 25, 2012, Karson was convicted by a jury of second-degree criminal sexual
conduct (CSC-II), MCL 750.520c(1)(b) (victim between 13 and 16 and is a member of the same
household as defendant), disseminating sexually explicit material to a minor, MCL 722.675, and
using a computer to commit a crime, MCL 752.797(3)(c). Defendant was sentenced as a second-

1
 In re Parole of Karson, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered June 14, 2023 (Docket
No. 365926).

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offense habitual offender, MCL 769.10, to 10 to 22½ years’ imprisonment for CSC-II, one to three
years’ imprisonment for disseminating sexually explicit material to a minor, and two to six years’
imprisonment for using a computer to commit a crime. The CSC-II charge involved Karson
digitally and orally penetrating his adopted minor daughter, AK, from 2004 until 2009. The other
two convictions arose from Karson forcing AK to view pornographic movies and websites, and
hide pornographic images on her computer.

        In February 2021, Karson was considered for parole. He had a parole-guidelines score of
+5, indicating a high probability of parole. Despite this score, the Board denied Karson parole on
February 9, 2021, because he had not completed a program designed to address his aggressive
nature, he minimized his criminal behavior, and he did not take responsibility for his actions.

       In June, 2021, Karson completed a Violence Prevention Program (VPP). Following this
improvement, the Board reconsidered Karson for parole. On September 14, 2021, the Board
granted Karson parole because it believed that it now had adequate assurances that Karson would
not become a menace to society or public safety if paroled.

        It was subsequently discovered that Karson’s parole-guidelines score was inaccurate;
Karson’s parole-guidelines score was +5, but it should have been +2. With Karson’s prior score
of +5—which again gave him a high probability of parole—the Board had discretion to deny
Karson parole only if it had substantial and compelling objective reasons. See MCL 791.233e(6).
With Karson’s corrected parole-guidelines score of +2, he had an average probability of parole,
and the Board did not need substantial and compelling objective reasons to deny parole. When
the Board was presented with the correction to Karson’s score, however, the Board summarily
stated that the change did not alter its decision.

       AK appealed the Board’s decision to the circuit court. That court concluded that the Board
abused its discretion by granting Karson parole because nothing had changed in Karson’s situation
from when the Board denied him parole in February 2021 to when the Board granted him parole
in September 2021 except for his completion of the VPP.

        Karson filed an application for leave to appeal the circuit court’s decision in this Court. In
lieu of granting leave to appeal, this Court vacated the circuit court’s order, remanded the case to
the Board, and ordered the Board to provide an explanation regarding why, in light of the change
in Karson’s parole-guidelines score, parole was still warranted. In re Parole of Evans Karson, Jr,
unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered November 18, 2022 (Docket No. 362262).

        On remand, the Board produced a list of reasons explaining why it granted Karson parole.
AK then challenged the Board’s reasoning in the circuit court again, arguing that the Board merely
restated its original reasons for granting parole and failed to provide any additional explanation.
The Board and Karson filed briefs in response, arguing that the Board had provided a sufficient
explanation justifying its decision. The circuit court agreed with AK and again reversed the
Board’s decision to grant Karson parole.

       This appeal followed.

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                                   II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       On appeal, Karson challenges the circuit court’s ruling overturning the Board’s decision to
grant parole to Karson.

       The Board’s decision to grant parole to a prisoner can only be reversed if a reviewing court
concludes that the Board’s decision amounted to “a clear abuse of discretion” or “violated the
Michigan Constitution, a statute, an administrative rule, or a written agency regulation.” In re
McBrayer, 511 Mich 403, 412; ___ NW2d ___ (2023) (cleaned up). This standard entitles the
Board’s decision to “great deference,” id. at 416, and a reviewing court may not substitute its
judgment for that of the Board’s, In re Wilkins, 506 Mich 937, 937 (2020). This standard is the
same for the circuit court and the Court of Appeals. In re McBrayer, 511 Mich at 412. “It is the
judgment of the Parole Board, not the circuit court, that is entitled to deference . . . .” In re Wilkins,
506 Mich at 937.

                                           III. ANALYSIS

       Karson argues that the Board did not abuse its discretion by maintaining its grant of parole
to Karson, even after Karson’s parole-guidelines score was corrected. We agree.

        Whether to grant or deny parole lies solely within the broad discretion of the Board. Jones
v Dep’t of Corrections, 468 Mich 646, 652; 664 NW2d 717 (2003). The exercise of that discretion
is largely guided by the parole guidelines. Those “guidelines set out factors—such as criminal
history, type of offense, conduct in prison, mental health, and age—for determining whether a
prisoner merits parole.” In re McBrayer, 511 Mich at 413. Parole-eligible prisoners receive scores
based on these factors, and those scores place the prisoner into one of three categories: high
probability of parole, average probability of parole, and low probability of parole. Id.

        As previously stated, Karson was originally granted parole after his parole-guidelines score
reflected a high probability of parole. That score was erroneous, however, and Karson’s actual
parole-guidelines score placed him in the average-probability-of-parole category. Despite this
change, the Board issued a statement summarily stating that the “new information does not change
previous decision.” This explanation in light of the change in Karson’s parole-guidelines score
was insufficient, according to a panel of this Court, because the change in Karson’s parole-
guidelines score affected “the entire framework for determining whether to grant parole, see MCL
791.233e(6) and (7).” In re Parole of Evans Karson, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals,
entered November 18, 2022 (Docket No. 362262). Thus, this Court remanded this case to the
Board for it to provide an explanation for “why in light of the correction of Mr. Karson’s parole
guidelines, granting parole is still justified.” Id. On remand, the Board complied with this Court’s
order and provided a list of reasons for its decision to maintain its grant of parole to Karson.

        The Board’s reasons for maintaining its grant of parole to Karson were based primarily on
factors that the Board was required to consider under MCL 791.233e. These included Karson’s
criminal history, see MCL 791.233e(2)(d); institutional behavior and programing, see MCL
791.233e(2)(b) and (c); institutional risk assessments, see MCL 791.233e(3)(a); and an interview.
The Board explained that it did not conduct a second interview with Karson after his parole-
guidelines score was adjusted because the parole-score change did not necessitate one. The Board

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also explained that Karson’s sex-offender-recidivism risk was low, and placing a low-risk prisoner
into sex-offender treatment could actually increase the risk of recidivism. Additionally, the Board
noted that Karson successfully completed the VPP, demonstrated good conduct while in prison
apart from a fight in 2019, and his parole was subject to multiple conditions, including GPS
monitoring. The Board concluded by stating that the “cumulative effect of these factors and the
Board’s experience and discretion resulted in the Board determining that there was reasonable
assurance that the prisoner would not become a menace to society or public safety [i]f paroled.”

        When reversing the Board’s decision, the circuit court stated that the Board’s explanation
amounted to “regurgitating prior factors” that the Board had relied on in its previous decision
granting parole to Karson. The court reasoned that, in its “assessment of each of those points and
in the totality,” the court was not “convinced” that the Board’s reasons “justifie[d]” its “decision
to continue with a grant of parole.” The circuit court emphasized that it had previously reversed
the Board’s decision to grant parole to Karson, and it believed that the Board had not adequately
addressed the court’s previously-stated concerns. In its prior ruling, the circuit court reasoned that
the Board erred by granting parole to Karson “because he still presents a significant danger to the
community, family members, and the victims.” To support this conclusion, the circuit court relied
on the fact that the Board had denied Karson parole only months before it granted him parole, and
the court believed that Karson’s only progress during that time was his completion of the VPP.

         The circuit court erred by concluding that the Board abused its discretion by granting
Karson parole. Based on the circuit court’s statements, it appears that the circuit court simply
substituted its judgment for that of the Board’s. The circuit court reasoned that the Board abused
its discretion by granting Karson parole because, based on the circuit court’s own “assessment” of
the Board’s reasons for granting parole, the court was not “convinced” that the Board’s reasons
“justifie[d]” its decision to grant parole. But the question for the circuit court was not whether the
Board’s decision to grant parole was “justifie[d]”; it was whether the Board’s decision to grant
parole was within the range of reasonable and principled outcome. See In re McBrayer, 511 Mich
at 416 (“Consistently with the default definition of that standard, the Parole Board abuses its
discretion when it chooses an outcome that is outside the range of reasonable and principled
outcomes.”). In a similar vein, the circuit court’s own “assessment” of the factors considered by
the Board was irrelevant; it was the Board’s task to assess the pertinent factors and render a
decision, and it was the circuit court’s task to review that decision. In so doing, the circuit court
did not need to independently assess the factors considered by the Board and decide whether the
court would grant parole. Rather, the court’s review was limited to whether the Board abused its
discretion. See id. (“[W]e reiterate that reviewing courts must not substitute their own judgment
for that of the board.”).

         The only discernable reason given by the circuit court for reversing the Board’s decision
to grant Karson parole is the fact that the Board had denied Karson parole just months before, and
all that had changed in that time was that Karson completed the VPP. Yet it is not apparent how
this renders the Board’s decision to grant Karson parole an abuse of discretion. It is true that the
Board denied Karson parole just months before it granted Karson parole. And accepting as true

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that the only change in those months was that Karson completed the VPP,2 it is still unclear why
that renders the Board’s decision an abuse of discretion. The Board previously denied parole to
Karson in part due to his failure to participate in a program designed to address his aggressive
nature. Karson then participated in the VPP—a program designed to address his aggressive nature.
With Karson having remedied one of the reasons identified by the Board for denying Karson
parole, it was reasonable for the Board to reach a different conclusion when it reconsidered
paroling Karson.3

        To summarize, the Board adequately explained why it granted parole to Karson. It detailed
how it considered the statutorily-mandated parole guidelines as part of its parole-decision process,
and how its consideration of those factors, as well as its experience, led it to conclude that Karson
should be paroled. When the circuit court reversed the Board’s decision, it did so not because the
Board abused its discretion but because the court substituted its judgment for that of the Board’s.
This was improper and warrants reversal. We therefore reverse the judgment of the circuit court
and reinstate the Board’s grant of parole.

       Reversed. This judgment is given immediate effect pursuant to MCR 7.215(F)(2).

                                                              /s/ Anica Letica
                                                              /s/ Colleen A. O’Brien
                                                              /s/ Thomas C. Cameron

2
 For clarity, however, it is not true that Karson only completed the VPP in the months from when
he was denied parole to when he was granted parole. In that time, Karson also demonstrated that
he was taking responsibility for the crimes of which he was convicted, and the Board had
previously denied Karson parole for not doing so.
3
  We note that the circuit court appeared to independently weigh the importance of Karson’s
participation in the VPP in yet another example of the circuit court substituting its judgment for
that of the Board’s. The circuit court minimized the importance of Karson’s participation in the
VPP, while the Board did not.

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