XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics, alt.transgendered
XPost: alt.politics.democrats.d, talk.politics.guns
San Luis Obispo District Attorney Dan Dow just sent California Governor
Gavin Newsom a letter urging reversal of the Board of Parole HearingsÆ
decision to release Allie Brown (formerly Herbert David Brown, III) early
from prison.
This is ôAllie BrownÆsö booking photo:
https://californiaglobe.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Screenshot-2025-04- 28-at-12.08.02%E2%80%AFPM-232x300.png
Herbert David Brown III, now known as Allie Brown. (Photo: 2015 booking
photo)
ôPrecious Lily deserves better. The time is now Governor Newsom, please
help ensure that we have Justice for Lily Brown!ö DA Dow said.
DA DowÆs letter asks Gov. Newsom:
ôto review the grant of parole to inmate Allie Hazel Brown (CDCR# AY2227)
and to reverse the grant of parole that has now been affirmed by the Board
of Parole Hearings en banc.
We have reviewed the record and have concluded that Inmate Brown remains a dangerous threat to public safety. Inmate Brown was granted parole on
October 30, 2024 having previously pled guilty to second degree murder, accepting a term of 15 years to life. Inmate Brown entered prison in
November 2015. You referred this case for an en banc hearing which
occurred on April 22, 2025. There, the board of parole affirmed their
previous grant of parole.
Brown murdered BrownÆs own daughter, Lily Brown, when Lily was not yet 2
years old and still in diapers. Inmate Brown, then a male (formerly
Herbert David Brown), had a relationship with LilyÆs mother, Dawn. On
February 18, 2013, Lily was with Brown when police were called after Lily became nonresponsive. Inmate Brown told police that the babyÆs bruises,
seen on her legs and head, were from playing and the dog pulled on a leash
that she held, slamming Lily into a door jamb.
Lily was in critical condition and taken to a childrenÆs hospital at
Stanford Medical Center. The doctor there found numerous bruises which he opined were 2 to 3 days old. Subsequently, a CAT scan revealed that Lily
had suffered a fractured skull and hemorrhaging in her brain. The doctorÆs diagnosis was that the baby was violently shaken and her head was slammed against something hard at least once.
Due to the extent of baby LilyÆs injuries, at the age of only 22 months,
she was taken off life support. Then Lily was pronounced dead.ö
DA DowÆs letter is embedded below.
What Mr. Brown did to that baby should have guaranteed him a life sentence
in prison. Only those deliberately unraveling CaliforniaÆs criminal
justice system would think otherwise.
From DA DowÆs press release:
ôIt is shameful for the Parole Board to grant Herbert David Brown III
early release from prison,ö said District Attorney Dan Dow. ôMr. Brown was convicted of murdering his own 22-month young daughter Lily due to abuse
he inflicted upon her while he was using and under the influence of methamphetamine. Brown, who now identifies as a woman and goes by the name æAllie Brown,Æ was sentenced to serve 15-years-to-life and should have
served every day of the 15 years before being considered for possible
parole. I ask the Board of Parole Hearings: æWhere is the justice for Baby Lily?Æö
ôHerbert Brown beat his two-year-old daughter to death in 2013. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to 15-to-life, of which he has only done
12 years,ö Kent Scheidegger with the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation
said.
Perhaps even more important, Scheidegger said the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation does not believe that California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has this power. ôThe Sacramento Superior Court agreed. See
this press release from December 2023. CDCR appealed and asked for a stay.
CJLF opposed the stay. Judge Rockwell granted a partial stay, allowing the Board of Parole Hearings to continue holding parole hearings and issuing decisions but forbidding CDCR from releasing the illegally early
parolees.ö
ScheideggerÆs press release reports on Sacramento Superior Court Judge
Jennifer RockwellÆs decision ôthat the Newsom AdministrationÆs effort to
grant early releases to tens of thousands of prison inmates is invalid
when it comes to offenders sentenced to indeterminate sentences, most of
whom are sentenced for violent crimes.ö Oral argument on the appeal is May
20.
DA Dow is also working for the reversal of Proposition 57, passed by
California voters in 2016, which assured voters that only non-violent
offenders would be considered for early parole. We knew then and have
proof now, that Prop 57 promoters were lying, and the Lily Brown case is evidence.
DA Dow says Mr. Brown was convicted and sentenced to a minimum of 15 years
to life. At the time of his conviction, the law stated that in order to be considered for parole, the convict must first serve every day of the
minimum û in this case, 15 years. Proposition 57 gave offenders extra
credits toward their sentence, leading to early eligibility û
retroactively.
ôThe CDCR has been releasing violent criminals, including murderers, years earlier than the law allows,ö said CJLF Legal Director Kent Scheidegger.
ôSome of these released criminals have committed new violent crimes,ö he
added.
Here is DA DowÆs letter:
https://californiaglobe.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/BROWN-ALLIE_- AY2227_Letter-to-Governor-April-25-2025_Redacted.pdf
https://californiaglobe.com/fr/baby-murderer-granted-early-parole-thanks- to-prop-57/
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