Court Opinion

ID: 9369866
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-09 20:02:40.951626+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:17.385127
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

TYNISE M. ADKINS                            )
          Petitioner,                       )
    v.                                      )       C.A. No: S23M-02-002 RHR
                                            )
KIMBERY HUGHEY                              )
Warden, B.W.C.I.                            )
           Respondent.                      )

                               Submitted: February 7, 2023
                                Decided: February 9, 2023

      ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

       This 9th day of February, 2023, upon consideration of Tynise M. Adkins’s

Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus and the record in this case, the court finds the

following:

       1. Adkins is incarcerated at the Baylor Women’s Correctional Institution

(“BWCI”), a Level V prison for women.

       2. Adkins was serving a six-year prison sentence in Maryland.1 She had

multiple cases pending in this court and she applied to return to Delaware to resolve

those cases pursuant to the Interstate Act on Detainers.2

       3. Adkins entered a guilty plea on December 19, 2022 that resolved her

1
  Transcript of Plea and Sentencing at 12-14, State v. Adkins, (I.D. Nos. 1911004971,
2004000287, 2104011467) (D.I. 35).
2
  11 Del. C. § 2542.
Delaware cases. Pursuant to her plea agreement, this court sentenced her to two years

suspended after serving six months at Level V, followed by Level III probation to

run concurrent with any probation presently imposed.

       4. Adkins filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus claiming that she is still

being held in pre-trial detention, which makes her ineligible for good time credits or

to be classified. She has apparently asked BWCI staff to be returned to Maryland,

where all of her possessions and money are located. She also complains that her

mental state is being adversely affected by seeing other inmates being released from

the pretrial unit.

       5. Under Delaware law, a writ of habeas corpus provides very limited

relief.3 “Habeas corpus provides an opportunity for one illegally confined or

incarcerated to obtain judicial review of the jurisdiction of the court ordering the

commitment.”4 Where the prisoner is committed on charge of felony, clearly set

forth in the sentencing of commitment and legal on its face, the granting of a writ of

habeas corpus is inappropriate.5

       6. In the present matter Adkins is not being detained illegally. She is serving

3
  Hall v. Carr, 692 A.2d 888, 891 (Del. 1997).
4
  Id. (Citing In re Pitt, 541 A.2d 554, 557 (1988)).
5
  Curran v. Woolley, 104 A.2d 771, 773 (Del. 1954).
                                               2
a prison sentence in Maryland and is only in Delaware through the Interstate Act on

Detainers to resolve her charges pending here. The time that she is serving in

Delaware is being applied to her Maryland sentence.

       7. And, even if Adkins were not serving a sentence in Maryland, she received

a six-month Level V sentence in Delaware, so she would not otherwise be released.

To the extent Adkins complains about being held in a pretrial unit, this court does

not micro-manage the Department of Correction in its classification and placement

decisions.6

       IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Tynise Adkins’s Petition for Writ of

Habeas Corpus is DENIED.

                                                  /s/ Robert H. Robinson, Jr.
                                                 Robert H. Robinson, Jr., Judge

6
  See State v. Goodman, 2010 WL 547394 at *1-2 (Del. Super. Feb. 9, 2010) (emphasizing where
this court gives heed to the administrative processes and procedures of prisons).
                                             3