State v. Fletes - Writ of Mandamus Denied
Summary
The Oregon Supreme Court denied a petition for a writ of mandamus filed by the State of Oregon in State v. Fletes. The case concerned the application of presentence incarceration credits to consecutive prison sentences. The court's decision upholds the lower court's disposition.
What changed
The Oregon Supreme Court denied the State of Oregon's petition for a writ of mandamus in State v. Fletes (Docket No. S072586). The state sought to correct or modify judgments regarding the application of presentence incarceration credits to consecutive prison sentences. The majority opinion denied the petition, while one justice dissented, arguing for an alternative writ.
This ruling means the prior disposition regarding the application of credits stands. For legal professionals and courts, this signifies the final decision on this specific mandamus petition concerning sentencing credit interpretation. No new compliance actions are required for regulated entities, as this is a judicial decision on a specific case.
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Feb. 5, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
State v. Fletes
Oregon Supreme Court
- Citations: 374 Or. 861
- Docket Number: S072586
Disposition: The petition for writ of mandamus is denied.
Disposition
The petition for writ of mandamus is denied.
Combined Opinion
No. 11 February 5, 2026 861
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON
STATE OF OREGON,
Plaintiff-Relator,
v.
DOMINIC AGAPITO EARL FLETES,
aka Dominic Fletes, aka Dominic Agapito Fletes,
aka Dominic Agapito E. Fletes,
Defendant-Adverse Party.
(CC 22CR09099, 22CR09574) (SC S072586)
En Banc
On petition for writ of mandamus filed January 16, 2026;
considered and under advisement on February 3, 2026.*
Jennifer S. Lloyd, Assistant Attorney General, Salem,
filed the petition for writ of mandamus for plaintiff-relator.
Also on the petition were Dan Rayfield, Attorney General,
and Paul L. Smith, Solicitor General.
Thaddeus Betz, Oregon Justice Resource Center, Youth
Justice Project, Portland, filed the response to the petition
for defendant-adverse party.
PER CURIAM
The petition for writ of mandamus is denied.
Bushong, J., dissented and filed an opinion.
- On petition from an order of the Jackson County Circuit Court, Laura A. Cromwell, Judge. 862 State v. Fletes Cite as 374 Or 861 (2026) 863
PER CURIAM.
The petition for writ of mandamus is denied.
BUSHONG, J., dissenting.
I would have issued the alternative writ of manda-
mus and, if the trial court adhered to its decision, I would
set this case for briefing and argument on the merits.1
Relator sought relief in the trial court under ORS 137.172
to “correct” or “modify” what relator contended were “erro-
neous” terms in the judgments that had been entered in
defendant’s criminal cases.2 Those judgments imposed two
consecutive 13-month prison sentences in one case, and a
consecutive 30-month prison sentence in another case,
for a total prison sentence of 56 months. In relator’s view,
those judgments were “erroneous” because they did not
clearly indicate whether the court was ordering presentence
incarceration credit to be applied once towards defendant’s
56-month prison sentence or multiple times to each of the
separate consecutive prison sentences. As I will explain,
that is a plausible argument under ORS 137.071, a statute
that relator did not cite in its petition.
After defendant was sentenced, the Department of
Corrections (DOC) applied defendant’s presentence incar-
ceration credits once toward defendant’s 56-month prison
sentence. Then, after this court’s decision in State ex rel
Torres-Lopez v. Fahrion, 373 Or 816, 572 P3d 1045, adh’d
to as modified on recons, 374 Or 423, 579 P3d 1056 (2025),
DOC recalculated defendant’s sentences to apply those cred-
its multiple times to each of the consecutive sentences that
had been imposed by the sentencing court. That recalcula-
tion led DOC to release defendant from prison. DOC then
changed its interpretation of the sentencing documents,
concluding that its original interpretation had been correct
1
Issuing an alternative writ does not mean that we have decided the merits
of the petition. See HotChalk, Inc. v. Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, 372 Or
249, 256, 548 P3d 812 (2024) (noting that the fact that this court “issued an alter-
native writ at the outset of a mandamus proceeding” does not resolve the merits
of whether the trial court had a legal duty to act or whether the party seeking
relief has another means of recourse that is plain, speedy, and adequate).
2
The adverse party in this mandamus case was the criminal defendant in
the underlying criminal cases. For ease of reference, I refer to the adverse party
here as “defendant.”
864 State v. Fletes
after all. Based on that subsequent recalculation, DOC
ordered defendant’s arrest pursuant to ORS 144.350 so that
he could finish serving the remainder of his 56-month prison
sentence.
In response to habeas petitions filed by defendant
and others who were similarly situated, this court deter-
mined that ORS 144.350 did not authorize DOC to sum-
marily arrest and imprison those defendants and, therefore,
we ordered DOC to release them from custody. See Fletes v.
Thrasher, 374 Or 735, __ P3d __ (2026); McEwen v. Thrasher,
374 Or 744, __ P3d __ (2026); Hatton v. Sundquist, 374 Or
739, __ P3d __ (2026); Arellano-Sanchez v. Thrasher, 374 Or
623, ___ P3d ___ (2025); Allen v. Thrasher, 374 Or 618, ___
P3d ___ (2025); Hernandez v. Thrasher, 374 Or 643, ___ P3d
___ (2025). Relator then filed its motion to correct or modify
the judgments in defendant’s criminal cases. The trial court
denied relator’s motion, concluding that the original judg-
ments may have been ambiguous, but they were not “erro-
neous,” and, thus, the court did not believe that ORS 137.172
gave it any authority to correct or modify those judgments.
Determining whether ORS 137.172 gave the trial
court that authority would require us to interpret the stat-
ute, applying our familiar methodology based on the stat-
utory text, context, and any relevant legislative history.
State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 206 P3d 1042 (2009). The most
relevant context, in my view, is ORS 137.071(2)(g), which
requires a judgment document in a criminal case to “[s]pec-
ify clearly the court’s disposition, including all legal conse-
quences the court establishes or imposes.” DOC’s apparent
confusion over whether the original judgment documents
required it to apply presentence incarceration credit once
or multiple times to the consecutive sentences imposed by
the court suggests that those judgment documents did not
“specify clearly” all the legal consequences of the prison sen-
tences that the court had imposed. In that sense, at least,
the judgment documents may have been “erroneous.” It
would seem to follow, in my view, that the trial court would
have authority under ORS 137.172 to consider correcting
or modifying the erroneous terms in those judgment doc-
uments and make the legal consequences of the sentences
Cite as 374 Or 861 (2026) 865
clear. I would issue an alternative writ of mandamus, and if
the trial court adhered to its decision, I would set the matter
for briefing and argument so that we could resolve the issue
on its merits.
Unfortunately, relator did not address ORS
137.071(2)(g) in its petition, and none of the cases cited by
the parties have considered how ORS 137.071(2)(g) in con-
junction with ORS 137.172 might affect the analysis. That
should not, in my view, preclude us from requesting briefing
on the issue so that we can resolve it in this mandamus case.
Nor should the court’s decision declining to issue an alterna-
tive writ in this case preclude consideration of the issue in a
future case.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from this court’s
decision to deny the petition for a writ of mandamus.
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