Kevin DeMello, representing Francis Arbelay, argued the appeals court should correct a sentencing‑credit calculation that he said left his client effectively without credit for nearly 455 days the defendant spent in custody. DeMello told the panel that bureaucratic delay and docket handling left the credit applied against a short sentence rather than the longer sentence that should have been reduced.
"He's got almost a year that he's spending in prison that gets credited to a shorter sentence that's meant to be concurrent with another sentence," DeMello said, urging the court to view the record through a lens of fundamental fairness.
The justices pressed on the arithmetic and on collateral consequences: whether parole calculations or the defendant's plea to a later charge make the dispute moot, and whether a nunc pro tunc remedy is appropriate. The court also queried why the defendant pleaded guilty in the later case rather than entering a conditional plea to preserve appeal rights.
Rosellen Alcori, arguing for the Commonwealth, replied that the probation‑violation challenges are largely moot where the defendant later pled guilty to the Plymouth charges and that the hearing judge acted within discretion in continuing the violation hearing to obtain sealed records. The panel explored whether credit applied in different sentencing vehicles (probation revocation vs. underlying sentence) produces practical differences in release dates.
The court did not rule from the bench; the justices pressed counsel on procedural posture and the appropriate remedy if a credit error is found.