parole boards

At times, we hear of prisoners having the parole board recommend them for release, then the judge denies this. If so, what is the point of having a parole board? I’m asking because, as far as I know, its happened twice, with Leslie van Houten and Bob Beausoleil.

You answered your own question. Parole boards review cases and make recommendations. Why those with the power to actually release the prisoners are not required tofollow those recommendations is possibly what puzzles you?

Judge? Where does this happen? In the situations I am familiar with it is the governor who can prevent release and it is usually because of negative media coverage/public pressure in high profile cases.

Googling, in both of those cases, it was the governor who denied the parole.

They both should have been executed. When the SC overturned death penalty they got a reprieve converted to life, should have been life without parole

Basically the board serves as a sort of triage for the system; at least that is how I always understood it. They check the basic information, do some level of investigation, ask some questions and note the answers, and then make a sort of recommendation. Not that unlike the nurse who saw me last in the ER. Right or wrong, agree or not, they help keep the system going.

I don’t think California had life without parole when those murders were committed.

Both of those cases are in California- just because the governor makes the final decision in California doesn’t mean that’s true in every state- according to this , only three states allow the governor to reverse a parole board’s decision, and in NY the board makes the final decision.

In PA, the board has no authority to parole from a life sentence. The board can recommend parole but the governor must approve it. Some sign off more than others. Tom Ridge, for example, never paroled a single lifer.

That’s a little different - everything I’ve been able to find about PA states that those sentences are " life without parole" which require the governor to commute the sentence in order for the person to be eligible for release and according to the PA Board of Probation and Parole website :

I believe sentence commutations in every state are up to the governor.

Apologies, that’s what I meant.:o

I had read somewhere that many others who were in for life, after 50 years received parole. is it because of their association with the crazy guy?

Yes

It’s kind of hard to speculate when you’ve given us so few details. Who are you talking about, where were they incarcerated, and who is the crazy guy you referenced?

It is purely because of the Manson infamy that van Houten is still behind bars. Take that away and she would have been out decades ago. Beausoleil would have only been released more recently.

People seem to think that every single murderer is either executed or put away for life. Not remotely true. Take this guy. Stomped an employee to death. Did less than 4 years.