Court Opinion

ID: 7803856
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-26 14:07:03.512197+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:29:44.187474
License: Public Domain

Michael Farmer v. State of Maryland
No. 31, September Term 2021

Criminal Procedure – Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence – Cognizability. A
motion to correct an illegal sentence under Maryland Rule 4-345(a) addresses errors that
are “inherent” in a sentence. It is not a vehicle for belatedly raising alleged errors in a trial
or proceedings that resulted in the sentence, for challenging the administration of the
sentence, or for generally litigating the procedures that may govern a future reduction of
that sentence or the defendant’s release from custody. Whether State-furnished counsel is
available to assist an inmate in the parole process under current Maryland law does not
inhere in the sentence of a defendant sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of
parole. Therefore, a claim that a juvenile offender would be entitled to such assistance
when that defendant becomes eligible for parole in the future is not cognizable under
Maryland Rule 4-345(a).
Circuit Court for Baltimore City
Case Nos. 101243067, 101243072
Argued: January 6, 2022                                                                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                             OF MARYLAND

                                                                                                      No. 31

                                                                                             September Term, 2021

                                                                                               MICHAEL FARMER

                                                                                                        V.

                                                                                              STATE OF MARYLAND

                                                                                                    *Getty, C.J.,
                                                                                                    *McDonald
                                                                                                    Watts
                                                                                                    Hotten
                                                                                                    Booth
                                                                                                    Biran
                                                                                                    Gould,

                                                                                                             JJ.

                                                                                            Opinion by McDonald, J.

                                                                                          Filed: August 26, 2022

                                                                                   *Getty, C.J., and McDonald, J., now Senior
                                                                                   Judges, participated in the hearing and
                                                                                   conference of this case while active
                                                                                   members of this Court. After being recalled
 Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
                                                                                   pursuant to Maryland Constitution, Article
Materials Act
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.   IV, Section 3A, they also participated in the
                       2022-08-26                                                  decision and the adoption of this opinion.
                       09:34-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
       In 10 simple words, Maryland Rule 4-345(a) provides that “[t]he court may correct

an illegal sentence at any time.” This provision is a necessary backstop to remedy a

situation where a sentence in a criminal case that never should have been imposed or that

is contrary to law escapes correction during the normal appeal and post-conviction process.

However, a motion under the rule is not a vehicle to cure all ills in a criminal case that can

be said, in some way, to be “illegal.” An illegal sentence, for purposes of this rule, is one

where the illegality “inheres” in the sentence; it is not every sentence where a failure to

comply with a law affects the sentence in some way.

       Petitioner Michael Farmer pled guilty in 2002 to committing two brutal murders

when he was 17 years old. He was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences. As a result

of those sentences and a consecutive sentence for an unrelated assault, he will not be

eligible for parole, at the earliest, until he has served more than 25 years in prison. Supreme

Court decisions issued during the past two decades have construed the ban on “cruel and

unusual” punishments in the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution to

require that sentences imposed on a juvenile offender like Mr. Farmer afford the offender

a “meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and

rehabilitation” – a condition generally thought to be satisfied by the possibility of parole.

Citing those cases, Mr. Farmer filed a motion to correct an illegal sentence in the Circuit

Court for Baltimore City. He asserted that his sentence does not include the “meaningful

opportunity” required by the Eighth Amendment because the Maryland parole laws do not

provide a right to State-furnished counsel to assist an inmate during the parole process.

Therefore, he asserts, his sentence is illegal.
      The Circuit Court and the Court of Special Appeals rejected his various arguments

supporting that claim. We hold that Mr. Farmer’s claim does not fall within the category

of claims cognizable under Rule 4-345(a).

                                            I

                                      Background

A.    The Maryland Parole System and Juvenile Offenders

      The parole process in Maryland is overseen by the Maryland Parole Commission, a

unit of the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services (“the Department”).

Maryland Code, Correctional Services Article (“CS”), §7-101 et seq. The Commission

consists of 10 commissioners appointed by the Secretary of the Department, with the

approval of the Governor and the advice and consent of the Senate. CS §7-202. The

Commission has the “exclusive power” to authorize the release of an inmate on parole. CS

§7-205(a)(1).1 Among other things, the commissioners (and, in some cases, hearing

examiners employed by the Commission) conduct parole hearings to consider the release

of eligible inmates serving sentences in Maryland prisons. CS §§7-204(b)(2), 7-205. As

directed by statute, the Commission has adopted regulations governing the parole process.

      1
         Until recently, the Governor’s approval was required for the release of an inmate
serving a life sentence. See Carter v. State, 461 Md. 295, 320-23 (2018); CS §4-305(b)(3),
§7-301(d)(4) (2017 Repl. Vol. & 2021 Supp.). Legislation enacted in 2021 eliminated the
Governor’s role in the parole process. Chapter 30, 1st Spec. Sess., Laws of Maryland 2021,
amending CS §4-305, §7-301.

                                            2
CS §7-207; COMAR 12.08. Those regulations distinguish, to some extent, between adult

and juvenile offenders.2

       1.     General Considerations

       For all parole-eligible inmates in Maryland, the Commission must consider a list of

factors that assess the inmate’s moral culpability, at both the time of the offense and the

time of parole hearing, as well as the inmate’s capacity to return to society as a productive

and law-abiding person. See generally CS §7-305; COMAR 12.08.01.18A.3 Accordingly,

the Commission is to consider numerous factors and attributes of the inmate. Some items

concern the inmate’s track record before incarceration, such as a prior criminal record, past

use of controlled substances, and the circumstances surrounding the crime (although these

circumstances “diminish in significance” after an initial parole hearing). See COMAR

12.08.01.18A(5)(a),(e),(l). Other items include an inmate’s demonstrated improvement

during incarceration, such as participation in institutional and self-help programs and

“demonstrated emotional maturity and insight into the inmate’s problems.” COMAR

12.08.01.18A(5)(b),(f). Yet other items concern the inmate’s present outlook, including

       2
         Separate parole provisions, not relevant here, apply to juvenile offenders admitted
to the Patuxent Institution as a person eligible for remediation. CS §4-101 et seq.
       3
          For a parole-eligible inmate, the general considerations listed by regulation
include: the circumstances surrounding the crime; the “physical, mental, and moral
qualifications” of the inmate; whether there is reasonable probability that the inmate, if
released, will not violate the law; whether the release is “compatible with the welfare of
society”; whether there is substantial risk the individual will not conform to the conditions
of parole; whether release would “depreciate the seriousness of the individual’s crime or
promote disrespect for the law”; whether release would have an adverse effect on
institutional discipline; and whether continued incarceration would enhance the inmate’s
ability to lead a law-abiding life if released at a later date. COMAR 12.08.01.18A(1)-(2).

                                             3
the inmate’s “current attitude toward society, discipline, and other authority” and “ability

and readiness to assume obligations.” COMAR 12.08.01.18A(5)(d),(j). Other items

address an inmate’s potential to succeed upon release, including vocational and educational

training, employment plans and job potential, family status and stability, access to

resources, and the “parole plan.” COMAR 12.08.01.18A(5)(c),(h),(i),(k).

       2.       Considerations Specific to Juvenile Offenders

       To ensure that juvenile offenders serving life sentences with the possibility of parole

have the constitutionally mandated “meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on

demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation,”4 the Commission must also consider additional

factors beyond what is normally required for adult offenders.                  See COMAR

12.08.01.18A(3)-(4). First, “[w]hen deciding if an inmate serving a life sentence for a

crime committed while younger than 18 years old is suitable for parole, the Commission

shall consider whether the inmate has adequately demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation

since commission of the crime.” COMAR 12.08.01.18A(3). Then, the Commission must

consider mitigating factors regarding the inmate’s circumstances at the time of the crime:

the inmate’s age, maturity, home environment, outside pressures, and educational

background. COMAR 12.18.01.18A(4)(a)-(c),(e),(f). Additionally, the Commission must

consider “whether the prisoner’s character developed since the time of the crime in a

manner that indicates the prisoner will comply with the conditions of release” and, as

determined to be relevant, “other factors or circumstances unique to prisoners who

       4
           See Part I.B of this opinion concerning this constitutional requirement.

                                               4
committed crimes at the time that individual was a juvenile.”                         COMAR

12.18.01.18A(4)(d),(g).

       3.     Process

       To assist the Commission in assessing the suitability for release of an inmate in a

State correctional facility, the Division of Correction undertakes an investigation of the

inmate. CS §7-301(a)(1).5 An inmate eligible for parole is to receive a hearing unless,

following a review, the Commission “determines that no useful purpose would be served

by a hearing.” COMAR 12.08.01.17A(1),(3). The Commission’s regulations describe a

parole hearing as follows:

              A parole hearing is actually an interview of the inmate, and attendance
       shall be restricted to parole personnel and a representative of the institution.
       On occasions, others may be invited by the Commission to attend, provided
       their attendance does not impede the prisoner being interviewed. The
       hearings are private and shall be held in an informal manner, allowing the
       prisoner the opportunity to give free expression to his views and feelings
       relating to his case. Formal presentations by an attorney, relatives, and others
       interested in the inmate are not permitted at the parole hearings. Attorneys,
       relatives, and others who are interested in the inmate may discuss the relative
       merits or other factors of the case with the Commission at its executive
       offices, any time before or after a parole hearing.

COMAR 12.08.01.18C(1). If a victim makes a timely request, a parole hearing is to be

open to the public in accordance with the Commission’s regulations. CS §7-304; COMAR

12.08.02. The hearing is to be electronically or stenographically recorded and, for a

juvenile offender serving a life sentence, the recording is to be retained until the next parole

       5
        For an inmate confined in a local correctional facility, the investigation is
conducted by the Division of Parole and Probation. CS §7-301(a)(1).

                                               5
hearing or the conclusion of any action seeking judicial review, whichever is later.

COMAR 12.08.01.18C(2)-(4).

       An inmate is to receive “adequate and timely written notice” in advance of the

hearing. CS §7-303(a). The notice is to advise the inmate that the inmate – or the inmate’s

representative – may examine any document that the Commission or a hearing examiner

will use in determining the inmate’s suitability for release on parole. CS §7-303(b)(1)(i).6

       For an inmate serving a life sentence, two commissioners conduct the parole

hearing. COMAR 12.08.01.17A(7)(f). If the two commissioners do not agree whether an

inmate should be paroled, the case is referred to a three-commissioner panel for decision

by majority vote. CS §7-307(b). In either case, if the decision is in favor of parole for that

inmate, the Commission en banc – defined as a majority of the commissioners – must

consider the case. COMAR 12.08.01.17A(7)(f), 23A. For an inmate sentenced to life

imprisonment for a crime committed after October 1, 2021, six commissioners must

affirmatively vote in favor of parole for the inmate to be released on parole. CS §7-307(c).

       A written decision is to be prepared and served upon the inmate.             COMAR

12.08.01.18E(2). If parole is denied in a case involving a juvenile offender serving life

imprisonment, the written decision must affirm that the Commission considered the

“diminished culpability” and “hallmark features” of youth,” as well as “an individual’s

capacity for growth and maturation.” COMAR 12.08.01.18E(3)(b). In addition, the

       6
         A document may be withheld from the inmate or the inmate’s representative if it
contains a diagnostic opinion, if disclosure would disrupt seriously the inmate’s
rehabilitation, or if it is confidential or otherwise privileged. CS §7-303(b)(1)(ii).

                                              6
decision must include “specific findings as to why the inmate has failed to demonstrate

suitability for parole” and state why the Commission “determined that the inmate has not

yet demonstrated sufficient maturity and rehabilitation.” COMAR 12.08.01.18E(3)(a),(c).

Looking forward, the decision is to provide guidance on how the inmate may improve the

likelihood of showing suitability for parole at a future hearing, provide specific

recommendations for programming and treatment, if appropriate, and notify the inmate of

any right to seek judicial review of the denial.7 COMAR 12.08.01.18E(3)(d)-(f).

       The Commission may neither permanently refuse parole to a juvenile offender

serving a life sentence nor schedule a rehearing more than 10 years from the date of the

previous hearing. COMAR 12.08.01.18E(12).

       4.     Assistance of Counsel

       Under the Commission’s regulations, counsel may assist an inmate with the parole

process. Those regulations allow an inmate’s legal representative to review the parole file

and examine documents used by the Commission in its parole decision. See COMAR

12.08.01.17(C)(2),(5)(b). If the Commission conducts a fact-finding hearing regarding the

inmate’s application, counsel may be present and assist with the testimony and cross-

examination of witnesses. COMAR 12.08.01.17(C)(6)(c)(iv). As indicated above, at the

parole hearing itself, counsel may not make a formal presentation, but may discuss the case

separately with the Commission before or after the hearing. COMAR 12.08.01.18C(1).

       7
         The parole statute does not provide for a right to judicial review. At oral argument
in this case, counsel suggested that judicial review may be available in some cases in a
habeas corpus action or through administrative mandamus (Maryland Rule 7-401 et seq.).

                                             7
The State does not furnish counsel to indigent inmates for hearings before the

Commission.8

B.     Constitutional Limits on Sentencing of Juvenile Offenders

       As summarized by this Court in Carter v. State, 461 Md. 295, 308-14, 317-18

(2018), the Supreme Court has recognized in several cases during the last two decades that

the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution sets certain constraints on the

sentencing of juvenile offenders who are convicted as adults. In a nutshell, under the

Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on “cruel and unusual” punishments, a court may not

sentence a juvenile offender to death, Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 568 (2005), and for

juvenile non-homicide offenders, a court may not sentence a juvenile offender to life

without parole, Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48, 75 (2010). The same is also true for the

vast majority of juvenile offenders convicted of homicide. Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S.

460, 479 (2012). In short, most juvenile offenders must be afforded a “meaningful

opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Graham,

560 U.S. at 75; Miller, 567 U.S. at 479. And, often, that “meaningful opportunity” comes

through the availability of parole. Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. 190, 212 (2016).

       In Carter, this Court recently addressed the constitutionality of the Maryland parole

system for juvenile offenders serving life sentences. Like Mr. Farmer, the petitioners had

challenged that system by way of a motion under Maryland Rule 4-345(a) to correct an

       8
        An inmate who is paroled and later is charged with a parole violation that may lead
to revocation of parole has a right to the assistance of counsel, including State-furnished
counsel for eligible parolees. CS §7-401(b)(1); COMAR 12.08.01.22F(3).

                                             8
illegal sentence. Two of the petitioners in that case, who had been sentenced to life

imprisonment with the possibility of parole, argued that their sentences were illegal because

the sentences were effectively life without parole in light of the facts that: (1) the Governor

had the final say regarding parole for inmates serving life sentences; and (2) the pertinent

statute did not require the Governor to take account of the criteria identified in the recent

Supreme Court cases for release of juvenile offenders – or, indeed, any criteria at all. The

petitioners in Carter highlighted that the system had resulted in very few parole releases,

as even if the Commission recommended parole, the Governor could – and often did –

determine otherwise.9     As a result, they asserted, the Maryland parole system was

effectively an executive clemency system in disguise, it failed to provide them with a

meaningful opportunity for release, and their sentences violated the Eighth Amendment

and were therefore illegal. 461 Md. at 340.

       The Court held that a claim based on the Governor’s statutory role in the parole

process was cognizable in a motion under Rule 4-345(a), although it ultimately concluded

that the petitioners’ sentences were not illegal when related laws were taken into account.

Carter, 461 Md. at 336-46. The Court recognized that the Governor’s unfettered discretion

       9
         In 1995, in the course of denying parole to several inmates serving life sentences,
Governor Glendening declared that he would not approve the parole of any prisoner serving
a life sentence unless the inmate was very old or terminally ill. Carter, 461 Md. at 323.
Even in the absence of such a pledge by a Governor, parole of such inmates was rare.
Between 2004 and 2017, the Commission recommended parole for only 14 juvenile
offenders sentenced to life out of a population of more than 2,100 such inmates. Of these
14 inmates recommended for parole, only two were approved by the Governor for release.
See Lila Meadows, Realizing “Meaningful” in Maryland: A Call for Reforming
Maryland’s Parole System in Light of Graham, Miller, & Montgomery, 48 U. Balt. L.F.
59, 63-64 (2018).

                                              9
to adopt a no-parole policy would unconstitutionally deny juvenile offenders serving life

sentences a meaningful opportunity for release. Id. at 341. But the Court also recognized

that a 2018 Executive Order appropriately guided the Governor’s decision within

constitutional bounds, remedying the potential constitutional defect. Id. at 345. Thus, on

the issue of whether the role of the Governor in the parole system violated the Eighth

Amendment with respect to juvenile offenders, the Court concluded that “the laws

governing parole of inmates serving life sentences in Maryland, including the parole

statute, regulations, and a recent executive order adopted by the Governor, on their face

allow a juvenile offender serving a life sentence a ‘meaningful opportunity to obtain release

based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.’” Id. at 307, 336-46.10 Since the Carter

decision was issued, the General Assembly has eliminated the Governor’s role in the parole

of inmates serving life sentences.11

       10
         The Court observed that allegations concerning how the laws governing parole
were carried out in practice were not cognizable under a motion to correct an illegal
sentence, although other remedies might be available. Carter, 361 Md. at 337 n.26, 346
n.34.
       11
         See footnote 1 above. Other recent legislation has prospectively prohibited
sentencing a juvenile offender to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
Chapter 61, Laws of Maryland 2021, codified in pertinent part at Maryland Code, Criminal
Procedure Article, §6-235.

                                             10
C.     Facts and Proceedings

       1.     The Murders, the Guilty Plea, and the Sentencing

       In two separate incidents in March and April 2001, Mr. Farmer, then age 17,12 and

two other teenagers robbed and murdered George Williams and Gerald Joseph Holle, both

homeless at the time, in Baltimore City by beating them with a baseball bat and crowbar –

an activity that the teenagers referred to as “bum-stomping.” A statement of charges

against Mr. Farmer concerning the murders was filed in the District Court sitting in

Baltimore City on July 30, 2001, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. Shortly thereafter,

Mr. Farmer was arrested at his home in Kansas, confessed to his participation in the

murders, and was returned to Maryland. A grand jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore

City returned indictments superseding the statement of charges on August 31, 2001.

       On September 5, 2002, Mr. Farmer pled guilty to two counts of first-degree murder

in accordance with a written plea agreement that included a requirement that he testify at

the trials of his two co-defendants. In exchange, the State agreed that it would not charge

him with assaults on four other men in February and March 2001 and would recommend

that the court impose two concurrent life sentences with all but 60 years suspended

followed by five years of probation. The plea agreement included a condition that, if Mr.

Farmer failed to fulfill his obligations under the agreement, “the State will recommend and

       12
         The Circuit Court docket for this case and Case Search indicate that Mr. Farmer
was born in February 1983 which, if correct, would mean that he was 18 at the time of the
murders in March and April 2001. In the Circuit Court, defense counsel asserted that Mr.
Farmer had actually been born in August 1983 – which also appears to be the birth date
associated with him in the original charging document in the District Court. The State has
not disputed that he was a juvenile at the time of the offenses in question.

                                             11
the Court shall impose the maximum penalties for each and every offense to which the

Defendant has pled guilty, i.e., two consecutive life sentences.” (emphasis in original).

       In July 2003, Mr. Farmer was called as a witness at a pretrial hearing in the case of

one of his co-defendants. He refused to testify or respond to any questions. His counsel

filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea, which the Circuit Court denied. A month later,

after holding a hearing at which Mr. Farmer confirmed his refusal to testify, the Circuit

Court found that Mr. Farmer had “clearly and unequivocally” failed to comply with his

obligations under the plea agreement. The court sentenced him to two consecutive life

sentences with the possibility of parole.

       Mr. Farmer applied for leave to appeal, which the Court of Special Appeals denied.

He also unsuccessfully sought post-conviction relief.

       Currently, an inmate serving a life sentence becomes eligible for parole after serving

“15 years of that sentence or the equivalent of 15 years considering … diminution” credits.

CS §7-301(d)(1).13 An inmate serving two consecutive life sentences, such as Mr. Farmer,

must first serve 15 years (or the equivalent of 15 years considering diminution credits) with

respect to each sentence before the inmate is eligible for parole.                   COMAR

12.08.01.17A(8)(a). Because Mr. Farmer has also received a consecutive 10-year sentence

for first-degree assault, he must also serve half of that sentence (i.e., five years) before he

       13
         Recent legislation substituted “20 years” for “15 years” with respect to defendants
convicted of an offense committed on or after October 1, 2021. Chapter 30, 1st Spec. Sess.,
Laws of Maryland 2021.

                                              12
is eligible for parole.14 Thus, Mr. Farmer would likely be eligible for parole after serving

something less than 35 years of his aggregate sentence.15

       2.     The Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence and Appeal

       In August 2014, Mr. Farmer filed a pro se motion to correct an illegal sentence

under Maryland Rule 4-345(a). Two years later, with the assistance of counsel, he filed a

supplement to that motion and requested a hearing. In filings in support of the Rule 4-

345(a) motion, he argued that various aspects of the Maryland parole system denied him a

meaningful opportunity for release and effectively converted his sentence into an

unconstitutional life-without-parole sentence. His primary argument, like that of the

petitioners in Carter, was based on the Governor’s role in the parole system at that time,

but he also pointed to the absence of a right to counsel.16

       14
          See CS §7-301(c)(1) (specifying parole eligibility for conviction of “violent
crime”); CS §7-101(m)(1) (defining “violent crime” in part by cross-referencing definition
of “crime of violence”); Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article, §14-101(a)(21) (defining
first-degree assault as “crime of violence”). The first-degree assault conviction related to
his stabbing a fellow inmate in 2008.
       15
          As noted in the text, the precise date of parole eligibility for Mr. Farmer depends
on the extent to which he earns and retains diminution credits during the course of his
confinement. See CS §3-701 et seq. At oral argument in this case, the State represented
that Mr. Farmer had approximately eight and one-half years of diminution credits, although
those credits can be subject to revocation. CS §3-709.
       16
         He made these arguments in the supplement to his motion and a post-hearing
memorandum. Each pre-dated both the Governor’s executive order concerning exercise of
the Governor’s parole authority and the Carter decision. In addition to the claim that the
parole system was effectively an executive clemency system for inmates serving life
sentences, those filings faulted other aspects of the parole process: (1) lack of a right to
counsel; (2) lack of access to diagnostic opinions, psychological assessments, and risk
assessments; (3) failure to record parole release hearings and detailed written findings

                                             13
       The Circuit Court denied the motion in a written order. State v. Farmer, Nos.

101243067, -072 (Dec. 19, 2016). Citing this Court’s opinion in State v. Kanaras, 357

Md. 170 (1999), the court held that, because the alleged illegality did not “inhere in the

sentence itself,” a motion to correct an illegal sentence was not the appropriate vehicle for

Mr. Farmer to challenge the “policies and procedures” of the Commission. Id.17

       Mr. Farmer appealed. The State moved to dismiss the appeal, arguing that Mr.

Farmer’s claims were not yet ripe and were not cognizable in a motion to correct an illegal

sentence under Maryland Rule 4-345(a). The Court of Special Appeals temporarily stayed

his appeal, pending this Court’s resolution of the Carter case. After the Carter decision

was issued, the State withdrew its motion to dismiss. The intermediate appellate court then

considered the case on the merits and affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court in an

unreported opinion. Farmer v. State, No. 2528, Sept. Term, 2016 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. July

2, 2019). The Court of Special Appeals concluded that Carter and its own decision in

Holly v. State, 241 Md. App. 349 (2019), foreclosed Mr. Farmer’s arguments based on

concerning denials of parole; and (4) lack of judicial review of adverse parole decisions.
Only the argument concerning a right to counsel is before us in this appeal.
       17
          After denying the motion on procedural grounds, the Circuit Court discussed in
dicta the merits of Mr. Farmer’s due process claims with respect to the parole process.
While agreeing that juvenile non-homicide offenders enjoy enhanced due process
protections in comparison to adult offenders, the court rejected Mr. Farmer’s argument that
a juvenile homicide offender has the same enhanced due process protections.

                                             14
alleged deficiencies in the parole process, including his claim of a constitutional right to

State-furnished counsel.18

       Mr. Farmer filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which we granted.

                                             II

                                        Discussion

       Most of the issues raised in Mr. Farmer’s pro se motion to correct an illegal sentence

and in the supplemental filings by counsel during 2016 have been resolved by the Carter

decision or changes in the law. His argument that the Governor’s role in the parole process

rendered his sentence illegal was rejected by the Court in Carter in light of the 2018

Executive Order, and, in any event, the Governor’s role in the parole process has been

eliminated by a statutory amendment in 2021. Many of his other procedural complaints

       18
           In Holly, the defendant was convicted at a jury trial of first-degree murder
committed when he was 17 and was originally sentenced to life in prison without the
possibility of parole. 241 Md. App. at 351. Following the Supreme Court decisions in
Miller and Montgomery and certain procedural steps, the trial court eventually vacated his
sentence and resentenced him to life imprisonment with the opportunity for parole. Id. at
352. The defendant appealed this new sentence, arguing that it was still unconstitutional.
Specifically, he argued that he would not have a meaningful opportunity for release
because the parole system does not provide a right to State-furnished counsel at parole
hearings, public funds for experts, or judicial review of parole decisions. Id. Without these
rights, he asserted, his sentence was a de facto sentence of life without parole.

       The Court of Special Appeals rejected those arguments. It concluded that the Carter
decision settled the matter. It interpreted the Carter opinion as holding that the statute,
regulations, and executive order governing parole, on their face, provided a juvenile
offender serving a life sentence with a meaningful opportunity for release. 241 Md. App.
at 355. Alternatively, the intermediate appellate court reasoned that, even if the Carter
decision was not dispositive, it would still reject the defendant’s argument that the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, or Articles 24 and 25 of the Maryland
Declaration of Rights, conferred procedural rights in a parole hearing greater than those
already provided by the Maryland parole laws. Id. at 356-71.

                                             15
relating to issues such as access to risk assessments, recording of parole hearings, and the

like have apparently been addressed in recent amendments to the Commission’s

regulations.19

       The sole remaining issue pressed by Mr. Farmer is the contention that a juvenile

offender serving a life sentence has a right to the assistance of State-furnished counsel at a

parole hearing. A preliminary issue, however, is whether that contention is cognizable as

the grounds for a motion to correct an illegal sentence under Maryland Rule 4-345(a).20

A.     Standard of Review

       Whether a sentence is illegal is a question of law – as is the question whether an

alleged defect relating to a sentence is cognizable in a motion to correct an illegal sentence.

Accordingly, an appellate court reviews a denial of a motion to correct an illegal sentence

       19
         See Proposed Amendment of Regulations of the Parole Commission, 48:14 Md.
Reg. 540 (July 2, 2021) (“These changes will provide a meaningful opportunity for release
on parole, with the understanding that juvenile lifers do not have a liberty interest in being
released on parole during their natural lifetime.”); Final Action on Regulations, 48:19 Md.
Reg. 802 (Sept. 10, 2021).
       20
          Mr. Farmer briefly argued that the State had waived the question of cognizability
because it had previously withdrawn a motion to dismiss his appeal on that ground that it
had filed in the Court of Special Appeals in 2017. As noted above, that motion was filed
at a time when Mr. Farmer’s primary argument, like that of the Carter petitioners, related
to the Governor’s role in the parole process. The State withdrew its motion after this Court
held in Carter that the issue related to the Governor’s role was cognizable in a Rule 4-
345(a) motion, but the State continued to argue that procedural issues like a right to State-
furnished counsel were outside the scope of a Rule 4-345(a) motion. In any event, Mr.
Farmer himself included the issue of the applicability of Rule 4-345(a) in his petition for
certiorari, which we granted. In deciding that issue, we must inevitably consider whether
his claim is cognizable under the rule.

                                              16
de novo. See Johnson v. State, 467 Md. 362, 389 (2020); State v. Crawley, 455 Md. 52, 66

(2017).

B.       Whether Mr. Farmer’s Claim is Cognizable under Rule 4-345(a)

         1.    Scope of a Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence

         Maryland Rule 4-345(a) authorizes a court to “correct an illegal sentence at any

time.”    That means that a defendant may ask a trial court to “correct” a sentence

“notwithstanding that (1) no objection was made when the sentence was imposed, (2) the

defendant purported to consent to it, and (3) the sentence was not challenged in a timely-

filed direct appeal.” Chaney v. State, 397 Md. 460, 466 (2007). Because Rule 4-345(a)

allows collateral and belated attacks on a sentence and is not subject to waiver, it is well-

established that its scope is narrow. Otherwise, it would swallow the general rule of finality

and allow repeated attacks on the underlying conviction. It is limited to situations where

there is some illegality inherent in the sentence itself or where no sentence should have

been imposed in the first place. Evans v. State, 382 Md. 248, 278-79 (2004).

         Errors inherent in a sentence

         An inherent error occurs when the alleged error relates to the trial court’s

fundamental power or authority and the sentence should have never been imposed or the

particular sentence was beyond the limits prescribed by statute or rule. See, e.g., Matthews

v. State, 424 Md. 503, 514-15 (2012) (motion to correct an illegal sentence appropriate

when the trial court had unlawfully imposed a sentence that exceeded the penalty provided

in a binding plea agreement in accordance with a Maryland Rule); Alston v. State, 425 Md.

326, 339, 341-42 (2012) (motion appropriate when trial court had unlawfully reopened a

                                             17
terminated postconviction proceeding); Ridgeway v. State, 369 Md. 165, 171 (2002)

(motion granted when the defendant was erroneously sentenced on three counts on which

he was acquitted); Holmes v. State, 362 Md. 190, 195-96 (2000) (motion appropriate when

trial court imposed a sentence of probation with home detention even though it lacked

authority to do so); Moosavi v. State, 355 Md. 651, 662 (1999) (motion appropriate when

the defendant had been charged, convicted, and sentenced under “an entirely inapplicable

statute”).

       Of course, some claims attacking a sentence as inherently illegal may be cognizable

in a motion under Rule 4-345(a), even though they are not meritorious. For example, in

Chaney, the defendant filed a motion to correct his sentence under Rule 4-345(a),

contending that probation conditions requiring that he pay restitution and maintain full-

time employment or student status were illegal and lacked evidentiary support. This Court

observed that there was “nothing intrinsically illegal about either condition” and the

absence of an evidentiary foundation would not make them otherwise. 397 Md. at 467. To

the extent that the claim focused on the lack of evidentiary basis for the probation

conditions, that alleged defect was not cognizable in a motion under Rule 4-345(a). Id. at

467-68.

       In Carter, the Court recognized as cognizable under Rule 4-345(a) a claim that the

Governor’s role in the parole process for inmates serving life sentences converted that

process into an executive clemency system. Such a claim, if true, would mean that juvenile

offenders serving life sentences would not have a meaningful opportunity for release

required by the Eighth Amendment for juvenile offenders, in light of the Supreme Court’s

                                           18
holding that an executive clemency system was inadequate for that purpose. Carter, 461

Md. at 336-39. The Court concluded that the claim was cognizable because the Governor’s

discretionary veto “inhere[d] in a sentence of life with possibility of parole.”           Id.

Ultimately, that claim failed as a result of the issuance of an executive order that cabined

the Governor’s discretion consistent with the Eighth Amendment.

       Errors not inherent in a sentence

       As illustrated below, a motion under Rule 4-345(a) is not a vehicle for belatedly

raising any alleged error in the trial or proceedings that resulted in the sentence, for

challenging the administration of the sentence, or for generally litigating the procedures

that may govern a future reduction of the sentence or the defendant’s release from custody.

        Trial errors. Various legal errors might affect or even result in a sentence, but if

they do not inhere in the sentence, they cannot be challenged through a motion to correct

an illegal sentence. See, e.g., Colvin v. State, 450 Md. 718, 727-28 (2016) (clerk’s failure

to include foreperson in polling jury concerning verdict not cognizable in a motion to

correct an illegal sentence); Tshiwala v. State, 424 Md. 612, 619-20 (2012) (collecting

cases). There are various procedural vehicles for challenging the merits of a conviction,

but a motion to correct an illegal sentence is not one of them. A motion to correct an illegal

sentence “is not an alternative method of obtaining belated appellate review of the

proceedings that led to the imposition of judgment and sentence in a criminal case.” State

v. Wilkins, 393 Md. 269, 273 (2006); Barnes v. State, 423 Md. 75, 84 (2011) (the motion

may not be used as “an end-run around appellate jurisdictional requirements”). Thus, in

resolving a motion to correct an illegal sentence, a court does not question the underlying

                                             19
conviction, but rather inquires only whether the resulting sentence is appropriate for that

type of conviction.

        Procedural errors in sentencing. Procedural defects in the sentencing proceeding

might affect the sentence, but the resulting sentence may still be lawful for the underlying

conviction. A motion to correct an illegal sentence is not an appropriate vehicle to

challenge such procedural errors. See Colvin, 450 Md. at 728. Thus, a Rule 4-345(a)

motion cannot be used to challenge: ineffective counsel at a sentencing proceeding, Evans,

396 Md. at 273-76; a sentencing judge’s failure to recognize the authority to suspend a life

sentence, Wilkins, 393 Md. at 275-76; the denial of the victim’s opportunity to speak, Hoile

v. State, 404 Md. 591, 622-23 (2008); a sentencing review panel’s lack of jurisdiction to

reconsider the sentence, Tshiwala, 424 Md. at 618; or the failure of a sentencing judge to

give credit for time served, Bratt v. State, 468 Md. 481, 500 (2020).

        Deficiencies in the administration of the sentence. A motion under Rule 4-345(a)

cannot be used to challenge the administration of the laws relating to a sentence because

such actions do not inhere in the sentence itself. For example, in Kanaras, the Court held

that an inmate’s life sentence was legal, even though the Parole Commission had allegedly

failed to exercise the discretion that the pertinent statute required it to exercise in

considering him for parole. 357 Md. at 185; cf. Lomax v. Warden, Maryland Corr.

Training Ctr., 356 Md. 569, 575 (1999) (holding that habeas corpus was an appropriate

vehicle for challenging Governor’s refusal to grant parole). The Kanaras Court explained

that “[t]he illegality was in the conduct of the Parole Commission and the Commissioner

of Correction; it did not inhere in Kanaras’s sentence.” 357 Md. at 185; see also Carter,

                                            20
461 Md. at 346 n.34 (stating that a claim alleging that the Governor failed to appropriately

exercise discretion to grant parole to inmates serving life sentences would not be

cognizable as part of a motion under Rule 4-345(a)).

       In short, Rule 4-345(a) provides a mechanism for correcting sentences that are

illegal in light of the underlying conviction. It cannot be used to attack the merits of a

conviction, to raise procedural errors at trial or in sentencing, or to litigate the

administration of a sentence.

       2.     Cognizability of Mr. Farmer’s Claim under Rule 4-345(a)

       A motion to correct an illegal sentence is not an appropriate vehicle for Mr. Farmer’s

claim. Mr. Farmer was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder. After he failed to

comply with his obligations under his plea agreement, the trial court sentenced him in

accordance with that agreement to two consecutive life sentences with the opportunity for

parole. That sentence does not exceed any pertinent limit set by statute or rule, and no

reason has been advanced that the sentence never should have been imposed. For a juvenile

homicide offender, it is lawful and constitutional on its face. See Montgomery v. Louisiana,

577 U.S. 190 (2016). It is thus outside the scope of a motion under Rule 4-345(a) to correct

an illegal sentence.

       Mr. Farmer attempts to fit his claim within the scope of Rule 4-345(a) by drawing

a parallel with the claim concerning the Maryland parole system found cognizable in

Carter. He argues that the lack of availability of State-furnished counsel to assist him when

he becomes eligible for parole in the future will effectively make it impossible for him to

obtain release on parole. As a result, he contends, he has no meaningful opportunity for

                                             21
release, his sentence is a de facto sentence of life without parole, and the sentence is

therefore unconstitutional and illegal.

       Mr. Farmer’s claim is quite distinct from the claim made by the petitioners in Carter

– and originally by Mr. Farmer in this case. The Governor’s role in the parole system for

inmates serving life sentences at the time Carter was decided was an inherent part of the

parole element of the sentences that those inmates were serving. The Governor was the

final decisionmaker as to whether an inmate would be released on parole. Before the 2018

Executive Order was issued, the Governor had unfettered discretion in making that

decision. Under the statute, the Governor could – and at least in one instance did – decide

never to grant release on parole, regardless of the merits of the particular case. Supreme

Court precedent had held that such a system was one of executive clemency that, though

legal for adult offenders, did not provide the meaningful opportunity for release that the

Eighth Amendment requires for the sentences of most juvenile offenders. The claim made

by the petitioners in Carter thus concerned the identity of the decisionmaker and the criteria

(if any) that bound that the decisionmaker in deciding their suitability for parole. As the

Court noted in Carter, the Governor’s role in parole eligibility was “part of the law annexed

to the crime at the time of a person’s offense.” Carter, 461 Md. at 338, quoting Gluckstern

v. Sutton, 319 Md. 634, 667, cert. denied, 498 U.S. 950 (1990). Accordingly, a life

sentence under that legal regime for most juvenile offenders potentially suffered from an

inherent illegality. The claim in Carter was cognizable to determine whether the 2018

Executive Order had cured that illegality.

                                             22
       By contrast, Mr. Farmer’s claim does not concern the identity of the decisionmaker

when he is eligible for parole – his claim is not directed at the Commission – or the criteria

that the Commission is to apply. On their face, the parole statute and regulations direct the

commissioners to consider the same criteria identified in the Supreme Court’s Eighth

Amendment case law for determining the suitability of a juvenile offender for release on

parole. Here his claim relates to the assistance that he may receive when he becomes

eligible for parole. That is not baked into his sentence.

       Put another way, it is not evident that assistance of State-furnished counsel is

required to ensure that a sentence complies with the Eighth Amendment.21 We note that

the Supreme Court cases on the sentencing of juvenile offenders hold that a parole system

provides the meaningful opportunity for release for those offenders without delving into

the precise details of state parole systems.22

       21
          No doubt, as Mr. Farmer’s counsel has eloquently explained, there are many ways
in which State-furnished counsel might enhance the chances that an indigent inmate would
obtain release on parole. And it may well be that the law will evolve to recognize a right
to such counsel under, for example, the due process principles of the State or federal
constitutions. In this case, however, we are called upon to address whether the mechanism
for making such arguments is a motion to correct an illegal sentence under Rule 4-345(a).
       22
          In Montgomery, the Supreme Court stated, in passing, that a state may remedy a
Miller violation by extending parole to all juvenile homicide offenders as an alternative to
resentencing specific offenders sentenced in violation of Miller. As an example, the Court
cited the Wyoming parole statute. 577 U.S. at 212. We note that, in a taxonomy of state
parole systems compiled by one scholar, both Wyoming and Maryland are among the states
that allow attorneys to provide some kind of direct input to parole authorities on behalf of
an inmate and that neither state is among the few that provide state-furnished counsel to
inmates. Sarah French Russell, Review for Release: Juvenile Offenders, State Parole
Practices, and the Eighth Amendment, 89 Ind. L.J. 373, 402-03 & nn.189, 196 (2014). Of
course, this observation is not dispositive of whether an inmate like Mr. Farmer has a right,
from some source of law, to appointed counsel in a parole proceeding. It simply suggests

                                                 23
       The fact that Mr. Farmer has not asserted a cognizable claim under Rule 4-345(a)

does not foreclose other procedural vehicles that may be available to him to assert a right

to State-furnished counsel during the parole process when he becomes eligible. For

example, “any person …, whose rights, status, or other legal relations are affected by a

statute, … administrative rule or regulation” may bring an action for a declaratory

judgment for the determination of “any question of construction or validity … arising under

the … statute … administrative rule or regulation … and obtain a declaration of rights,

status, or other legal relations under it.” Maryland Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings

(“CJ”), §3-406. The Declaratory Judgment Act contemplates that such actions may be

brought to challenge the constitutionality of statutes or regulations. See CJ §3-405(c)

(Attorney General to be served with action challenging constitutionality of statute).

       Even so, “the declaratory judgment process is not available to decide purely

theoretical questions or questions that may never arise, or questions which have become

moot, or merely abstract questions.” Hamilton v. McAuliffe, 277 Md. 336, 340 (1976)

(citations omitted). An action for a declaratory judgment is not “ripe” if it depends “upon

a state of facts which has not yet arisen, or upon a matter which is future, contingent and

uncertain.” State v. G & C Gulf, Inc., 442 Md. 716, 720-21 (2015) (internal quotation

omitted).

       At this time, any parole proceeding involving Mr. Farmer is some years – at least

half a decade – in the future. Any deficiencies in that process are hypothetical. By that

that it was not an element that the Supreme Court considered necessary for a parole system
to render sentencing of juvenile offenders compliant with the Eighth Amendment.

                                            24
time, he may have the ability to hire counsel or find a lawyer who will represent him pro

bono. Moreover, the laws and regulations governing the parole process may continue to

evolve, as they have over the past decade. Finally, it is conceivable that he may be able to

obtain the relief that he seeks in the interim under recent legislation known as the Juvenile

Restoration Act (“JUVRA”),23 rendering any complaint about the parole process moot. We

turn next to whether JUVRA already renders his claim moot.

C.     Whether JUVRA Renders Mr. Farmer’s Claim Moot

       The State moved, pursuant to Maryland Rules 8-602(c)(8) and 8-603(c), to dismiss

Mr. Farmer’s appeal on the ground that it is moot as a result of the General Assembly’s

recent enactment of JUVRA. Under a provision of that law, a juvenile offender sentenced

prior to October 1, 2021, as Mr. Farmer was, may file a motion for reduction of a sentence

after serving “at least 20 years for the offense.” See Maryland Code, Criminal Procedure

Article (“CP”) §8-110 (2021). The State also notes that the Supreme Court decisions

construing the Eighth Amendment constraints on the sentencing of juvenile offenders do

not mandate that a state have a parole process, so long as there is some meaningful

opportunity for release “by parole or otherwise.” Carter, 461 Md. at 340. The State argues

that, regardless of any deficiencies in the Maryland parole process, JUVRA provides the

necessary meaningful opportunity for release and that Mr. Farmer’s motion to correct an

illegal sentence is therefore moot. In their briefs, the parties debate whether JUVRA

provides an equal – or better – opportunity for release than parole.

       23
            Chapter 61, Laws of Maryland 2021.

                                             25
       Our holding that Mr. Farmer’s claim is not cognizable under Rule 4-345(a) makes

it unnecessary to reach the State’s motion to dismiss. There are a number of open questions

concerning the application of JUVRA to this case that make it neither desirable nor in the

public interest to address the State’s argument at this point in Mr. Farmer’s incarceration.

For example, what is the timing for an inmate to file a motion to reduce a sentence when

the inmate is serving an aggregate sentence comprised of consecutive periods of

confinement, and which sentences are eligible for reduction at that time? Will indigent

defendants who file motions under JUVRA have the assistance of State-furnished counsel?

Does the discretion of a court to grant a motion to reduce a sentence under JUVRA correlate

precisely with the Eighth Amendment’s standard for a meaningful opportunity for release

for most juvenile offenders?

       It seems quite possible that JUVRA will provide a meaningful opportunity for

release for most juvenile offenders serving lengthy sentences, as its sponsors and advocates

intended.24 In some respects, the parties seem to take the opposite positions from what one

       24
           A sponsor of the Senate bill that was enacted as JUVRA remarked that the
legislation would provide juvenile lifers an opportunity to be released from prison by
proving they have reformed their lives and shown that “[r]edemption is possible.” Written
testimony of Senator Christopher West (March 26, 2021) submitted to the House Judiciary
Committee concerning Senate Bill 494 (2021). In testimony before the House Judiciary
Committee concerning the cross-filed House Bill, a retired circuit court judge noted that
the federal Constitution requires that juvenile offenders have “a meaningful opportunity to
obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation” and opined that the bill
would “alleviate that constitutional problem” and bring “Maryland into conformance with
what the Supreme Court has mandated and what other states have already done.”
Testimony of Gary Bair on January 21, 2021, concerning House Bill 409 (2021), available
at https://tinyurl.com/5xr5pn6f at 4:35:23. Testimony by other advocates for the bill, such
as the Campaign for Fair Sentencing of Youth and the Maryland Catholic Conference, also

                                            26
might otherwise expect in arguing whether the enactment of JUVRA moots Mr. Farmer’s

claim here.25 There is no need for us to referee a philosophical boxing match in which the

parties have switched corners when this Court – or the Legislature – likely will have

answered the open questions concerning the application of JUVRA before Mr. Farmer’s

parole eligibility date.

                                             III

                                        Conclusion

       Mr. Farmer was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder. The trial court

sentenced him to two consecutive life sentences with the opportunity for parole. For a

juvenile homicide offender, this sentence, on its face, is lawful and constitutional. The

question whether he has a right to State-furnished counsel at a future parole hearing is not

cognizable as grounds for a motion to correct an illegal sentence. Other procedural

mechanisms, such as a declaratory judgment action, may permit Mr. Farmer to challenge

parole procedures at the appropriate time, but that is not this case. Nor can we say, at this

time, that JUVRA renders his claim moot.

equated the legislation with the standards set by the Supreme Court in Graham, Miller, and
Montgomery.
       25
          For example, the State suggests, but does not commit to, the idea that Mr. Farmer
will be eligible to seek a reduction of sentence under JUVRA after serving 20 years of his
aggregate sentence, well before his parole eligibility date, while Mr. Farmer suggests, but
does not commit to, the idea that he will not be eligible to seek a reduction under JUVRA
until he has served 40 years (20 years for each of his consecutive life sentences), which
would be beyond the date of his eligibility for parole. Similarly, in his reply brief, Mr.
Farmer suggests that he will not be able to appeal an adverse decision on a JUVRA motion,
while the State conceded in brief and at oral argument that he would be able to do so.

                                             27
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.

          28