Friday, September 5, 2008

Governor Reversed Parole Decision; Law Students Help Change Outcome

The Post-Conviction Justice Project at USC Law recently prevailed in a defining case for the California parole system for long-time client Sandra Davis-Lawrence.

USC Law students argued – and the California Supreme Court agreed – that a life-term prisoner is entitled to be granted parole once the prisoner no longer poses a danger to the community.

The Court rejected the Governor’s reversal of the parole commission’s grant of parole based solely on the circumstances of Sandra Davis-Lawrence’s 1971 commitment offense (first-degree murder), holding that the reversal violated her due process rights.

The 4 to 3 ruling provides meaningful judicial review of parole decisions by the Board of Parole Hearings and the Governor, and could affect nearly 1,000 parole cases now on appeal. Lawyers on both sides said it was the first time in recent history that the state’s highest court has ruled in favor of a prisoner in a parole case.

“This case is significant on so many levels – for Sandra who has paid for her crime and earned her freedom through exemplary efforts to educate and re-invent herself in prison, for so many clients of the clinic and other life-term prisoners who now see that their hard work toward rehabilitation in prison can lead to their freedom, and for all the students of the clinic who work so hard for their clients in every other case,” said Professor Rummel, who worked on the original petition as a visiting professor.

In the ruling, the justices said there was "overwhelming" evidence of Lawrence's rehabilitation while in prison demonstrating her suitability for parole. She earned two degrees in prison, including her MBA; mastered numerous marketable skills; served as a leader in many prison programs, including president of the inmates' Toastmasters Club; acted as a mentor for other women at the prison through a variety of programs; co-founded a tutoring program; and remained discipline-free. She also repeatedly expressed her extreme remorse for her crime and had tremendous support from the community for her release, including a job and a place to live.

This excerpt was taken from a Gould Law School publication which can be read in its entirety here.

2 comments:

E. Rocha said...

There are a lot of "lifers" in California. Hopefully this will inspire other inmates to better themselves for the right reasons. The parole board should use Ms. Lawrence's achievments as the standards for early release.

Professor Segal said...

Good point. Thanks for the comment