
    [No. A093799.
    First Dist., Div. Five.
    Oct. 10, 2001.]
    In re STEVEN CASWELL on Habeas Corpus.
    
      Counsel
    Bill Lockyer, Attorney General, David P. Druliner, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Paul D. Gifford, Sara Turner and Barbara Sutliffe, Deputy Attorneys General, for Appellant the People.
    Michael Satris, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Respondent Steven Caswell. .
   Opinion

STEVENS, J.

Respondent Steven Caswell (Caswell) was granted parole by appellant Board of Prison Terms (Board) in 1986, with a release date in September 2000. In 1999, the Board found cause to rescind the prisoner’s unexecuted grant of parole. After the trial court granted Caswell’s petition for writ of habeas corpus, overturning the rescission and reinstating Caswell’s parole release date, the Board appealed, contending the court erred because sufficient evidence supported its decision rescinding Caswell’s parole. We reverse the judgment.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Caswell is serving an indeterminate life sentence with the possibility of parole, following his 1976 conviction of four counts of kidnapping for the purpose of robbery (Pen. Code, § 209); he was also convicted of four counts each of first degree robbery (Pen. Code, §211), assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)), and attempted murder (Pen. Code, §§ 664, 187), as to which prison sentences were stayed. The Board is the executive agency authorized to grant parole and set release dates for prisoners serving life sentences, and in certain circumstances it may rescind an unexecuted grant of parole. (Pen. Code, §§ 3040, 3041.)

A. Caswell’s Offenses

The 1978 appellate decision affirming Caswell’s convictions summarizes the offenses as follows: “On the evening of May 20, 1976, at approximately 9:00 p.m., [the victims] college students Eanswythe Leicester, Jeremy Grainger, James McCabe and Laura Goldman were in the vicinity of Red-ding, California, on a camping trip. The [victims] stopped at campsite 14 of the Antlers Campground to eat and go swimming. On their way to the lake the [victims] met [the prisoner] Caswell and spoke with him briefly. After finding that they could not reach the lake from their campsite, the [victims] crossed campsite 16 on their way back to the car, and there talked with both [Caswell and his crime partner, David Englund] who were occupying that campsite, ft]] The [victims] then returned to their car and left the campsite, and as they passed campsite 16 [Caswell and Englund] came out to the road and waved for them to stop. [Caswell and Englund] asked for a ride out of the campground, then . . . Englund pointed a gun at the [victims] and ordered them out of the car. The [victims] were ordered to the campsite 16 picnic benches as Englund pointed the gun at them and Caswell pushed them along, saying that Englund had ‘a hole in his leg.’ Caswell drove the car into the campsite, ft]] [Caswell and Englund] demanded money from the [victims]; Jeremy and Laura gave their money to [Caswell and Englund] and James went to the car with Caswell and gave his money to him. Eanswythe had left her money in her backpack in the car and she told [Caswell and Englund] she did not have money. When [Caswell and Englund] wanted more money[,] Jeremy told them they were students and did not have much. Englund struck him with the gun. [Caswell and Englund] indicated that they were going to take the car, and again stated that Englund was wounded. HQ [Caswell and Englund] attempted to tie the [victims] at the picnic bench, but then took them through the bushes to a meadow where they were forced to lie on the ground. [Caswell and Englund] decided that the [victims] were too close to the road and might be able to shout for help, so they ordered them to get up and took them farther from the road. [Either Caswell or Englund] stated that Jeremy’s political T-shirt would make a good target. The gun was fired, but no one was shot at that time. HQ The victims were taken to a cliff and ordered to undress. Eanswythe was then tied by the ankles with Jeremy’s T-shirt, and Laura and Jeremy were tied together with rope [Caswell and Englund] had brought along. [Caswell and Englund] tied Eanswythe’s ankles to Laura and Jeremy using the same rope that Laura and Jeremy were tied with. While tying the victims, Caswell indicated that he wanted to take sexual advantage of one of the girls, but Englund was in a hurry and the matter was dropped. When the victims were tied [Caswell and Englund] debated whether to shoot them, Englund arguing that they should and Caswell saying they should not. HQ After tying three of the victims [Caswell and Englund] ran out of rope, and so they tied James’ [sz'c] legs with some clothing. Englund struck James with the gun[,] and Caswell pushed him off the cliff. [Caswell and Englund] shot at James and rolled rocks down at him until they believed he was dead. Caswell attempted to push the others off the cliff but failed, due to the manner in which they had been bound. The following discussion then took place: ‘Englund: “Okay, let’s just gag them.” Caswell: “Shoot them.” Englund: “Okay.” ’ Englund then shot Laura in the stomach and Jeremy in the chest. Eanswythe realized that it was her turn, and she held her hand in front of her face to prevent her glass lens from shattering into her eyes. She was struck with the gun four or six times, and two shots were fired at her, one passing by her ear and the other striking her finger. She then fell backwards. HQ [Caswell and Englund] ran back to the car and drove off.”

B. Board’s Grant of Parole in 1986

Caswell became eligible for release on parole in April 1983, but was denied a parole date on four occasions between May 1982 and March 1985, due at least in part to the seriousness of his offenses and, on most of these occasions, unfavorable psychiatric evaluations.

In March 1986, Caswell again appeared before the Board for parole consideration. In addition to the summary of the offenses from the appellate decision, the 1986 panel had before it other material depicting the crimes, including transcripts of the 1982 and 1985 parole hearings. Based on this information, it appeared the appellate court had attributed the statement, “Shoot them,” to Caswell due to the testimony of one of the female victims. The two male victims had testified that Caswell repeatedly disagreed with Englund’s suggestion to shoot them. According to the attorney who represented both Englund and Caswell at the 1985 hearing, Englund represented that Caswell had never suggested shooting the victims.

The 1986 panel found Caswell suitable for parole, based on: his minimal criminal record and lack of significant history of violent crimes; his stable social history; his participation in education programs, self-help programs, and vocational programs while in prison; his maturity and age; his parole plans, including job offers and family support; his positive institutional behavior; and favorable psychological evaluations. The panel stated: “Based on the information contained in the record and considered at this hearing, the panel states as required by [Penal Code section] 3043 that the prisoner would not pose an unreasonable threat to public safety if released on parole.”

The 1986 panel calculated an aggregate term of sentence of 36 years, minus 41 months of postconviction credits, and set a parole release date in December 2006. Caswell’s period of confinement was based on the four counts of kidnapping for the purpose of robbery. The panel set an aggravated term on two of these four counts, a middle term on another, and a mitigated term on the count pertaining to victim McCabe. The panel justified the mitigated term by pointing to the fact that, although Caswell pushed McCabe off a cliff and attempted to kill him, McCabe’s injuries were minor. Caswell’s term was later reduced, with a release date in September 2000.

The Board, sitting en banc, reviewed the grant of Caswell’s parole release date in August 1998. Although this review was undertaken without a transcript of the 1986 hearing, the hearing at which a panel found the prisoner suitable for parole, the Board ordered that a parole rescission hearing be conducted to determine whether there was good cause to rescind Caswell’s parole. Three reasons were identified for ordering the parole rescission hearing: (1) the extreme seriousness of the crime; (2) Caswell’s minimization of his involvement in the commitment offenses; and (3) Caswell’s lack of remorse.

C. The Board’s Rescission of Parole in 1999

At the rescission hearing in March 1999, the panel relied exclusively on the transcript of the 1986 hearing and did not receive any new evidence. For example, the 1999 panel was not in possession of transcripts of the 1982 and 1985 hearings, which would have provided full descriptions of the crimes and Caswell’s involvement, as well as Caswell’s testimony on those points.

Following the hearing, the 1999 panel unanimously found good cause to rescind Caswell’s parole, citing the extreme seriousness of the crimes and Caswell’s minimization of his involvement. In particular, the 1999 panel concluded that: (1) “[A]n in depth discussion of the life crime was not conducted by the [1986] Panel and the prisoner clearly minimized his role in this horrific crime”; (2) “[t]he '[1986] Panel never mentioned]” the stayed convictions; (3) the [1986] Panel’s mitigation of the term for McCabe “missed the point in that the prisoner acted alone in attempting to murder the victim by pushing him over a cliff’ and then with Englund “pushed boulders down on him to further do harm to the victim”; (4) Caswell minimized the “sexual overtures” he made to one of the female victims; and (5) the [1986] Panel should have found aggravation in the fact that Caswell “played an integral part in the facilitation of these crimes which resulted in numerous attempts to murder the victims” rather than finding mitigation in the fact that Caswell “did not shoot the victims.” The 1999 panel concluded, however, that Caswell displayed sufficient remorse.

The Board’s appeals unit denied Caswell relief. He then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in Solano County Superior Court.

D. The Trial Court’s Grant of Caswell’s Habeas Corpus Petition

On December 21, 2000, the trial court granted Caswell’s petition for writ of habeas corpus and ordered the Board to reinstate Caswell’s parole and parole date. The court found: “[A] full and complete review of the record herein fails to reveal any evidence in support of the rescinding panel’s conclusion that the grant of parole was improvidently given for failure to consider the seriousness of the crime or failure to consider the petitioner’s minimization of his involvement in the crime.”

The Board appealed, and the superior court granted a stay pending disposition of the appeal.

II. Discussion

A. Background

The Board is vested with exclusive authority to decide whether a life prisoner is suitable for parole. (Pen. Code, § 3040; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2265-2454; In re Powell (1988) 45 Cal.3d 894, 901 [248 Cal.Rptr. 431, 755 P.2d 881] (Powell).) One year before the prisoner’s minimum eligible release date, a panel of the Board meets with the inmate and normally sets a parole release date. (Pen. Code, § 3041, subd. (a).) Parole must be denied, however, if the panel in its discretion determines that the prisoner would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to society if released, in light of the gravity of his current convicted offenses or the timing and gravity of his current or past convicted offenses. (Pen. Code, § 3041, subd. (b); Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2281, subd. (a), 2402.)

Even after parole is granted, the Board is authorized to rescind the grant of parole, if unexecuted, for good cause after a rescission hearing. (Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at p. 901; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2450; see Pen. Code, §§ 3040, 3063.) “Cause” for rescission includes conduct enumerated in section 2451 of title 15 of the California Code of Regulations, which at the time of Caswell’s rescission hearing included: (1) any disciplinary conduct subsequent to the grant of parole, (2) psychiatric deterioration of the prisoner, and (3) new information indicating parole should not occur, such as an inability to meet a special condition of parole, information significant to the original grant of parole being fraudulently withheld from the Board, or fundamental errors which resulted in the improvident grant of parole. (Powell, supra, at p. 902.)

Cause for rescission is not restricted to those matters enumerated in California Code of Regulations, title 15, section 2451. (In re Johnson (1995) 35 Cal.App.4th 160, 168 [41 Cal.Rptr.2d 449] (Johnson); In re Fain (1976) 65 Cal.App.3d 376, 393-394 [135 Cal.Rptr. 543] (Fain).) Because the Board is afforded great discretion in parole decisions, “cause” includes a determination by the Board that parole was improvidently granted under the circumstances appearing at the time of the grant of parole or at a later time. (Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at p. 902; Johnson, supra, at p. 168; Fain, supra, at p. 394.) Thus, it has been held, parole may be rescinded if the granting panel failed to adequately consider the gravity of the prisoner’s convictions. (Johnson, supra, at pp. 168-169.)

Of course, a rescission may not be upheld merely because the Board has mouthed words that have been held to constitute “cause” for rescission. There must also be an adequate “factual underpinning for the Board’s determination of cause.” (Johnson, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at p. 169, italics added.) In light of the Board’s broad discretion in these matters, however, we review the sufficiency of this factual underpinning using an extremely deferential standard, requiring merely “some evidence” to justify the rescinding panel’s determination. (Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at pp. 902, 904-906.) As our Supreme Court has explained: “A parole date, like a good time credit, is a prospective benefit that is conditioned on the inmate’s continued good performance and subject to review and withdrawal for cause by the [Board]. While the board cannot rescind a parole date arbitrarily or capriciously, it does not abuse its discretion when it has some basis in fact for its decision. . . . [T]he [Board] must strike ‘a balance between the interests of the inmate and of the public.’ [Citation.] If it is to accomplish this delicate task, it must operate with broad discretion and not be ‘subject to second-guessing upon review.’ [Citation.]” (Powell, supra, at p. 904; Johnson, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at pp. 169-170.)

An example of the application of the “some evidence” standard was provided by our Supreme Court in Powell. There, a life prisoner was granted release dates at parole consideration hearings held in 1977 and 1979. After a subsequent counselor’s report expressed doubt.about the prisoner’s suitability for parole, the board ordered a rescission hearing. At the rescission hearing, the panel considered three psychological reports, all of which had been prepared after Powell had been given a release date. Two of the reports favored the grant of parole, while one report favored the rescission of parole. (Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at pp. 898-901.) The panel decided to rescind the prisoner’s parole release date, because (1) the report favoring rescission raised significant doubts about the prisoner’s potential for violence, convincing the panel that he would pose a danger to others if released, and (2) the granting panel had committed fundamental error, by failing to consider the prisoner’s prior escape attempt and gun smuggling incident and only perfunctorily considering another escape attempt. (Id. at p. 901.)

After announcing the applicable standard of review, our Supreme Court ruled that “some evidence” supported the first ground for rescission (pertaining to the new psychological evaluation), since the evaluation on which the Board premised its rescission was based on the prisoner’s complete medical and correctional history. (Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at pp. 905-906.) The court concluded: “In sum, while the evidence was unquestionably in conflict, the resolution of that conflict and the weight to be given the evidence was for the board. [Citation.] Since its determination had a factual basis, the board did not abuse its discretion in rescinding Powell’s parole.” (Id. at p. 906.)

However, we point out that Powell did not decide whether there was a sufficient basis in fact for the rescinding panel’s second ground for rescission—that the granting panel failed to adequately consider the gravity of the offenses. (Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at p. 906, fn. 12 [“Accordingly, we need not consider the [Board’s] finding that the 1977 and 1979 panels committed fundamental error resulting in the improvident granting of parole dates.”].) Powell therefore does not illustrate the application of the “some evidence” standard where, as here, the basis for the rescission was not new evidence, but a purportedly inadequate consideration of evidence by the granting Board.

Circumstances more analogous to the matter at hand were addressed by Division Four of this court in Johnson, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th 160. There, a prisoner convicted of two first degree murders was found suitable for parole in 1981. The Board, sitting en banc, later ordered a rescission hearing, due to (among other things) a clinical evaluation warning that his potential for violence on parole was unpredictable, a prison disciplinary action for possession of contraband, and concerns expressed by the Governor regarding public safety and the gravity of the prisoner’s crimes. (Id. at pp. 163-164.) After the hearing, the panel decided to rescind the prisoner’s parole on two grounds, both of which were premised on its disagreement with the granting panel’s assessment of the evidence: (1) failure to give “adequate weight” to the clinical evaluation report, which indicated that the prisoner’s release would pose a danger to public safety; and (2) inadequate consideration of the gravity of his crimes. (Id. at pp. 167-168.)

The appellate court ruled that a granting panel’s failure to adequately consider the gravity of the crimes may constitute “cause” for rescission of a prisoner’s parole release date. Turning to the sufficiency of the factual underpinning for the two grounds, the court identified “some evidence” to support the Board’s decision to rescind parole because, in effect, it was not unreasonable to do so. (Johnson, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at pp. 169-170.) The court explained: “Reasonable minds could differ as to whether the granting panel of the Board in 1981 gave adequate consideration to the gravity of Johnson’s offenses. Reasonable minds could also differ as to whether Johnson’s release would pose a danger to public safety and as to whether in that regard adequate consideration was given to the clinical evaluation report . . . . Because the Board’s discretion in parole matters is ‘“great,” “absolute,” and “almost unlimited” ’ [citation], it is certainly broad enough to permit the Board to make the findings herein.” (Johnson, supra, at p. 169.)

This language in Johnson should not be misconstrued. Johnson could be read—incorrectly—to uphold the rescission of a parole release date merely because “reasonable minds could differ” as to the panel’s determination of the prisoner’s suitability for parole. That is, as long as there had been “some evidence” before the granting panel that could have reasonably justified a finding of wnsuitability, a subsequent panel would have carte blanche to rescind the parole, decades later, for no reason other than its conclusory disagreement with the granting panel’s ultimate decision, or mere political aversion to the concept of parole in general. Notwithstanding the nearly absolute discretion of the Board, we find this interpretation of the standard untenable, and not in line with what our Supreme Court had in mind when it decided Powell. Indeed, “some evidence” of unsuitability for parole would exist in virtually every parole hearing, exposing every grant of parole to a Board’s subsequent change of heart or political whim.

In reviewing a rescission of parole based on the granting panel’s failure to adequately consider the gravity of the offenses, the proper focus is on the findings and conclusions that were central to the original panel’s ultimate decision to grant parole. When these findings or conclusions cannot be reconciled with the evidence before the granting panel, or when the granting panel misstated facts or explicitly declined to consider information germane to the gravity of the crimes, it can fairly be said that reasonable minds could differ on whether the panel gave adequate consideration to the severity of the crimes. In those instances, “some evidence” of the panel’s failure to adequately consider the gravity of the prisoner’s offense(s) would exist, thereby justifying rescission of the parole release date. (Cf. Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §2451, subd. (c) [rescission hearing (and rescission) warranted for “[fjundamental errors” by granting panel].)

We now proceed to review the 1999 panel’s decision de novo to determine if it properly applied the Powell standard to the findings and conclusions that underlay the earlier decision to grant parole. (See Powell, supra, 45 Cal.3d at p. 905.)

B. Evidence Supporting the 1999 Rescission of Parole

The record of the Board’s actions might suggest to some readers that the 1999 panel had determined Caswell’s fate before the hearing commenced. The en banc recommendation that a rescission hearing be held—purportedly because the 1986 panel improvidently granted parole—was made without benefit of a transcript of the 1986 hearing, and the rescinding panel did not have the 1982 and 1985 hearings’ transcripts, at which the offenses and Caswell’s participation were extensively discussed. In light of Caswell’s exemplary conduct throughout the period of his incarceration, one might question whether the determinations of either panel represented a predetermined conclusion in search of a justification, supported by little more than makeweight rationalizations for the rescission. (See generally In re Rosenkrantz (2000) 80 Cal.App.4th 409 [95 Cal.Rptr.2d 279].) Indeed, the statutory and administrative framework under which the Board operates invites debate over the role of political influence and public clamor in the parole review scheme. (See Warren, State Slams Door on Hopes for Parole Prisoners, L.A. Times (Oct. 3, 1999) p. 1.)

Our task, however, is not to debate the predisposition of the panel or the political influences upon it, but to determine whether there is an appropriate statement of “cause” for the rescission and “some evidence” to support the 1999 panel’s conclusions. The Board’s grounds for rescission, which we have reorganized slightly to clarify our discussion, were the following: (1) the granting panel did not conduct an in-depth discussion of the life crime; (2) the granting panel did not mention the stayed convictions; (3) the granting panel should have found aggravation in the fact that Caswell “played an integral part in the facilitation of these crimes which resulted in numerous attempts to murder the victims” rather than finding mitigation in the fact that Caswell “did not shoot the victims”; (4) Caswell minimized his role in the life crime and the “sexual overtures” he made to one of the female victims; and (5) the granting panel’s mitigation of the term for McCabe “missed the point in that the prisoner acted alone in attempting to murder the victim by pushing him over a cliff’ and then with Englund “pushed boulders down on him to further do harm to the victim.”

We accept the premise, not substantially disputed by the parties, that these grounds generally fall within the rubric of inadequate consideration of the gravity of Caswell’s offenses, and thus there exists a sufficient statement of “cause” for the action taken by the rescinding panel. (Johnson, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at pp. 168-169.) We next examine the factual underpinning for each of these grounds. As we shall explain, the first four grounds lack sufficient factual support in the record and, as such, cannot justify rescission of the parole release date. The fifth ground, however, properly addresses a determination by the granting panel, which was so at odds with the material before the granting panel that there is a sufficient factual basis to conclude the granting panel failed to adequately consider the gravity of Caswell’s offenses.

1. 1986 Panel’s Discussion of Caswell’s Life Crime

The 1986 panel’s discussion of Caswell’s life crime was not so lacking as to constitute evidence of the panel’s failure to consider the gravity of his offenses. The granting panel appeared familiar with the facts and began its interrogation of Caswell with questions concerning his involvement in the crimes. Unlike the 1999 panel, the 1986 panel also had transcripts of Caswell’s 1982 and 1985 parole hearings, which contained thorough descriptions of the offenses. In addition, the 1986 panel was provided a broad array of other material, including the transcript of the sentencing hearing at which the trial court commented on the seriousness of the offenses and a life prisoner evaluation discussing the aggravating circumstances of the commitment offense. We may presume the panel considered the evidence before it. (Evid. Code, § 664.)

In fact, the contention that the granting panel failed to sufficiently discuss Caswell’s life crime appears to be derived solely from the rescinding panel’s disagreement with the result of the 1986 hearing. The rescinding panel did not support its contention with any erroneous specific factual determination by the granting panel that concerned the life crimes. Nor did it cite to any express omission of evidence material to the earlier panel’s consideration of those crimes. Because the rescinding panel’s subjective characterization of the granting panel’s discussion of Caswell’s life crimes fails to address any specific finding and lacks evidentiary support, it is an insufficient ground for rescinding Caswell’s parole.

2. Failure to Mention Stayed Offenses

The 1999 panel also found that rescission was justified because the 1986 panel failed to mention Caswell’s stayed offenses. When Caswell was sentenced by the trial court, prison terms as to 12 of the 16 counts were stayed pursuant to Penal Code section 654: four counts each of attempted murder, first degree robbery with intent to inflict great bodily injury (including special findings that the victims suffered great bodily injury), and assault with a deadly weapon and/or by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury.

The 1986 panel’s failure to recite and discuss the stayed offenses is not evidence that parole was improvidently granted. There is no requirement that the stayed offenses be recited or independently discussed. Although the 1986 panel was obligated to consider the facts underlying these stayed offenses, since they were intertwined with the crimes for which Caswell was imprisoned (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2326, subd. (b)), we can find no statement by the 1986 panel, or other affirmative evidence, suggesting the panel declined to take into consideration the entirety of Caswell’s actions in its discussion of the commitment offenses. To the contrary, the 1986 panel discussed with Caswell topics such as the tying up and shooting of the victims, his suggestion of sexual contact with one of the female victims, the pushing of McCabe over a cliff and the rolling of rocks onto him, as well as more general questions concerning the prisoner’s participation in “all the acts.” We conclude that rescission cannot be justified on this ground.

3. Failure to Find Aggravation

As a third ground for rescission, the 1999 panel declared that the granting panel should have found aggravation in Caswell’s integral role in the facilitation of the crimes, which resulted in numerous attempts to murder the victims, rather than finding mitigation in the fact that Caswell did not shoot the victims. The suggestion that the 1986 panel mitigated Caswell’s crimes because he did not shoot anyone is inaccurate. The 1986 panel did not state that it considered Caswell’s actions less grave on this basis; and it did not reduce his term of confinement for that reason. Instead, the remarks to which the 1999 panel refers appear in the closing comments of one of the 1986 panel members, as follows: “This was an exceptionally serious and aggravated commitment offense. In mitigation, you did not shoot the victims, and you have made tremendous progress while in the institution.” (Italics added.) In context, the 1986 panel member was merely differentiating Caswell’s actions from those of Englund, based on the uncontroverted fact that Caswell was not the one pulling the trigger. The lone panel member’s gratuitous comment does not provide a factual underpinning for the 1999 panel’s determination that the granting panel failed to adequately consider the gravity of the commitment offenses.

4. Caswell’s Minimization of His Role in the Crimes.

The 1999 panel also concluded rescission was appropriate because Caswell minimized his role in the crimes and his “sexual overtures” to one of the female victims. In essence, at the 1986 hearing Caswell characterized his continuing participation in the crimes as an “inability” or “omission” in not escaping his crime partner. He also attributed his suggestion of sexual contact with the bound, naked female victim, held at gunpoint, as “awkwardness,” because he felt “uncomfortable tying those people up,” he was “trying to impress [Englund],” and he “didn’t want anybody to get shot.”

Initially we point out that, contrary to appellant Board’s implicit contention, a prisoner’s refusal to admit participation in the crime on matters of conflicting evidence does not necessarily constitute unsuitability for parole or mandate rescission. Section 2236 of title 15 of the California Code of Regulations reads: “The facts of the crime shall be discussed with the prisoner to assist in determining the extent of personal culpability. The board shall not require an admission of guilt to any crime for which the prisoner was committed. A prisoner may refuse to discuss the facts of the crime in which instance a decision shall be made based on the other information available and the refusal shall not be held against the prisoner.” (Italics added.) Nor does appellant provide any legal authority for the proposition that a prisoner’s “minimization” of his involvement in the crimes is sufficient to warrant rescission where, as here, the prisoner has acknowledged responsibility and demonstrated remorse.

At any rate, the record does not uphold the panel’s finding that Caswell minimized his involvement in the commission of the offenses. In testifying that the crimes escalated because of his “inability to control” and his “omission to do anything to counter what [Englund] wanted [him] to do,” Caswell took responsibility not only for what he actually did, but also for the escalation of the crime in his failure to act. The transcript of the 1986 proceedings reveals that Caswell repeatedly admitted full responsibility for the entirety of the incident. When asked whether he took “full responsibility for what happened,” he responded: “Yes, sir.” He was then asked, “Everything that you did prior to and after the life crime, you accept full responsibility for?” Caswell responded, “Yes, sir.” Notwithstanding how one may view his excuses for suggesting sexual contact with one of the female victims, Caswell prefaced his explanation with an acknowledgement of its insufficiency, stating: “And in no way, I don’t want this panel to take this as a justification, because I don’t believe there’s any justification for my actions . . . .” The 1999 panel’s rescission order is not justified on the ground Caswell minimized his involvement in the crimes.

5. The McCabe Offense

Last; we turn to the two panels’ views of Caswell’s criminal conduct relative to victim McCabe. The 1999 panel maintained that the granting panel misconstrued the gravity of this conduct and, as a result, improperly arrived at a mitigated term of imprisonment as to count VI, kidnapping for the purpose of robbery (Pen. Code, § 209), which identified McCabe as the victim. In particular, the 1999 panel concluded the 1986 panel “missed the point” that Caswell acted alone in pushing McCabe off a cliff and rolling rocks down onto him, and inappropriately focused on the fact that McCabe suffered only minor injuries. For reasons we shall explain, this ground for rescission reflects more than a mere disagreement with the ultimate determination reached by the 1986 panel. Instead, it targets a specific conclusion of the granting panel and establishes the disparity between the conclusion and the evidence.

Before proceeding to our analysis, we dispose of a matter which, although not addressed by the parties at any length, warrants clarification. The granting panel’s mention of the minor nature of McCabe’s injuries was not explicitly brought up during the Board’s assessment of Caswell’s suitability for parole. Rather, discussion of McCabe’s injuries, and the assignment of a mitigated term as to count VI, arose in connection with the granting panel’s calculation of Caswell’s release date. The granting panel’s determination of the prisoner’s suitability for parole and the calculation of a release date were made at the same hearing, by the same panel members, and based on the same evidence. The conclusion to be drawn is that the granting panel had the same evaluation of Caswell’s conduct when deciding his suitability for parole as it did when calculating his release date.

The granting panel’s assessment of Caswell’s participation in the McCabe offense was a specific finding, which, in the context of the record before us, was central to its ultimate determination of the gravity of Caswell’s offenses and his suitability for parole. Furthermore, the 1999 rescinding panel pointed to a factual basis in the record for concluding the granting panel’s finding was inconsistent with the facts before it. The evidence before the granting panel was as follows: after tying McCabe up, Caswell pushed him off a cliff and proceeded to roll rocks onto McCabe until he believed McCabe was dead. The fact that McCabe suffered relatively minor injuries might be attributed to fortuity or an act of God, but it certainly cannot be attributed to Caswell. On this record, reasonable minds could differ on whether the granting panel gave adequate consideration to the gravity of Caswell’s crimes. We are therefore constrained to agree there was “some evidence” this panel failed to adequately consider the gravity of Caswell’s criminal acts against McCabe. This ground alone justifies rescission of Caswell’s unexecuted grant of parole, and the trial court erred in ruling to the contrary.

HI. Disposition

The judgment is reversed.

Jones, P. J., and Simons, J., concurred.

A petition for a rehearing was denied November 8, 2001, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Petitioner’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 23, 2002. Baxter, J., and Brown, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted. 
      
      Caswell requested we take judicial notice of the first 11 pages of the transcript of the 1985 parole hearing that he inadvertently omitted from the record before the 1999 panel. We denied the request.
     
      
      In 2000, title 15, section 2451 of the California Code of Regulations was amended without substantive change, making the occurrence of “[fundamental errors” a separate ground for convening a rescission hearing. Under the current version, therefore, a rescission hearing (and rescission itself) may be based on (1) the prisoner’s disciplinary conduct; (2) his psychiatric deterioration; (3) “[fundamental errors” during the hearing at which parole was granted; or (4) new information indicating parole should not occur. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2451, subds. (a)-(d).)
     
      
      The rescinding panel’s assertion that the 1986 panel failed to adequately consider the 1982 and 1985 hearing transcripts is somewhat ironic, since the 1999 panel did not even have transcripts of Caswell’s 1982 or 1985 hearings when it passed judgment on the action taken by the earlier panel.
     
      
      Section 654, subdivision (a), reads: “An act or omission that is punishable in different ways by different provisions of law shall be punished under the provision that provides for the longest potential term of imprisonment, but in no case shall the act or omission be punished under more than one provision. An acquittal or conviction and sentence under any one bars a prosecution for the same act or omission under any other.”
     
      
      This is particularly relevant to the present case. As Caswell’s attorney pointed out at the 1999 hearing, the 1999 panel was to investigate whether the granting panel duly considered certain points or improvidently granted parole based on the material before it. Further testimony from Caswell is not relevant to whether the granting panel made an appropriate consideration of the record. Caswell himself explained that everything was a matter of record and he had nothing new to add.
     
      
      As mentioned, ante, the 1999 panel did not obtain transcripts from the 1982 and 1985 parole hearings, which were before the granting panel. The 1999 panel sought to excuse this failure by expressing confidence in Caswell’s attorney to bring to its attention salient information from these hearings. We reject the notion that a rescinding panel might be relieved, on that basis, from obtaining readily available information that had been considered by the granting panel. We point out, however, that nothing in the record suggests that the 1986 panel’s finding concerning Caswell’s criminal acts against McCabe turned on anything contained within the 1982 or 1985 transcripts. For this reason, the rescinding panel’s failure to obtain transcripts of the two earlier hearings poses no impediment to upholding the rescission based upon the granting panel’s view of Caswell’s participation in the McCabe offense.
     