Court Opinion

ID: 4519114
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-03-24 20:08:38.616228+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:40:42.872834
License: Public Domain

03/24/2020

            IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                                                                        Case Number: OP 20-0141

                                        OP 20-0141

JEREMY BUETTNER,

             Petitioner,                      MAR 2 4 2020
                                           Bowen Greenwood
                                         Clerk. of Supreme Court
       v.                                   State of Montana
                                                                      ORDER

 WARDEN LYNN GUYER,

              Respondent.

       Self-represented Petitioner Jeremy Buettner has filed a petition for a writ of
habeas corpus, indicating that the Board of Pardons and Parole (Board) should have
granted him parole and that the Board violated his due process rights in denying hirn parole.
Upon review of his petition, Buettner is challenging the process, or lack thereof, of his
recent parole revocation, resulting in his alleged illegal incarceration.
       Available electronic records indicate that Buettner has a long criminal history of
various convictions rnostly due to his use of alcohol. Of relevance here is his 2012
conviction for criminal endangerment when Buettner entered a plea of guilty in the
Twenty-Second Judicial District Court. Big Horn County. In November 2012, the
District Court sentenced Buettner to the Montana State Prison (MSP) for ten years with
none suspended and ran the sentence concurrently with his Yellowstone County conviction
of felony driving under the influence of alcohol.
       In his petition, Buettner contends that he was -never charged with, served written
notice ot, [or] no evidence was disclosed to [him] on a non-compliance charge of
absconding." Buettner explains that he was arrested on Decernber 20, 2019, in Kalispell
for parole violations and served with a copy of Report of Violations, dated July 17, 2019.
He includes a copy of this docurnent. He was held in the Flathead County Jail. Buettner
points out that by December 31, 2019, he had not been served with any notice of new
violations and that he had not appeared at the required on-site hearing within five days of
arrest, pursuant to § 46-23-1024(2), MCA. He further states that on the same day,he agreed
to sign a waiver of on-site hearing after being presented with such a document by a
Parole Officer. He contends that he should have been released, but acknowledges that he
waived this hearing in order to have an appearance before the Board for his compliance
violations.
       Buettner provides that on January 17, 2020, Institutional Probation and Parole
Officer (IPPO) Foley served him a Notice of Rights/Waiver of Appearance Revocation
Hearing, along with a copy of the July 17, 2019 Report of Violations.            Citing to
Morrissey v. Brewer, Buettner recpgnizes that he received (1) written notice of claimed
violations;(2) disclosure of evidence against parolee; and (3)the opportunity to be heard.
408 U.S. 471, 489, 92 S. Ct. 2593, 2604,(1972). Buettner adds that he appeared before
the Board on January 21,2020, at MSP. Buettner further provides that he signed the waiver
to proceed without an attorney present. Buettner contends that he was charged with
absconding when one of the Board members read the list of violations and that he was
never served with a notice of such charge. He argues that he was coerced into admitting
such "charge" and that his due process rights were violated. He lastly contends that the
Board is not complying with the parole revocation statutes given the 2017 legislative
change for compliance violations.
       Buettner's claims are without merit. Buettner was not charged with absconding. As
stated in the attached letter from Board Chair Annette Carter and § 46-23-1001(1), MCA,-
absconding "means when an offender deliberately makes the offender's whereabouts
unknown to a probation and parole officer or fails to report for the purpose of avoiding
supervision, and reasonable efforts by the probation and parole officer to locate the
offender have been unsuccessful." Here, as documented in, his attachments, while
Buettner's parole was revoked for absconding, indicated in his written case disposition, it
was based upon his July 17, 2019 Report of Violation. This Report listed six counts of
compliance violation such as illegal drug use, alcohol use, and failure to report in
January 2019. This Report also-mentions that Buettner was arrested at a casino two weeks
after his failure to report and that his probation and parole officer tried numerous times to
contact Buettner via telephone and home visits. Based upon this limited record, it is a
reasonable allegation that Buettner was deliberately making his whereabouts unknown to
his probation and parole officer, which is also known as absconding. We observe that in
2016 and 2017, Buettner had been placed on a parole hold and each time received a
ninety-day jail sanction for compliance violations.
       The Board adhered to Montana's statutory process for Buettner's parole revocation.
Buettner waived his right to an on-site hearing and proceeded with his parole revocation
appearance without counsel before the Board at MSP. Sections 46-23-1024(5), and
46-23-1025(2), MCA; Admin. R. M. 20.25.801(8)(2016). The Board revoked his parole
and   did   not award     him    any dead time, or time served              as a parolee.
Section 46-23-1025(6), MCA. The Board also imposed nine months custodial time,
pursuant to § 46-23-1025(2)(b)(i), MCA,wherein the Board "may[]... continue the parole
with modified or additional terms and conditions, which may include placement in [] a
secure-facility . . . ." Buettner must serve this time before he can apply to a pre-release
center.
      Buettner's due process rights were not violated in light of Montana's 2019 statutes
and case law. He does not need to be re-heard before the Board. After his arrest, Buettner,
as demonstrated in the supporting documentation, was given notice of the revocation
hearing. The Board afforded Buettner notice, disclosure of evidence, and opportunity to
be heard when he appeared before the Board. Morrissey,408 U.S. at 489,92 S. Ct. at 2604.
The Board determined that Buettner violated his parole and subsequently revoked his
parole, pursuant to § 46-23-1025(2), MCA. Buettner is not entitled to the removal of
"absconding" and a reappearance before the Board for compliance violations. He is not

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entitled to habeas corpus relief because he has not demonstrated illegal incarceration.
Section 46-22-101(1), MCA. Therefore,
      IT IS ORDERED that Buettner's Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus is DENIED
and DISMISSED.
      The Clerk of this Court is directed to send a copy of this ()rder to counsel of record
and to Jeremy Buettner personally.
      DATED this           day of March, 2020.

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