We granted certiorari to review an order of Judge Joseph H.H. Kaplan, of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, directing that the State Division of Correction release Vincent Henderson from custody. We shall affirm that order, but for different reasons than those used by Judge Kaplan.
*440This appeal requires that we revisit two earlier decisions—Md. House of Correction v. Fields, 348 Md. 245, 703 A.2d 167 (1997) and Beshears v. Wickes, 349 Md. 1, 706 A.2d 608 (1998). Those cases and this one involve the method of calculating diminution credits that prisoners are eligible to earn for good conduct while incarcerated, and it would be helpful to begin by reviewing that subject.
Inmates in the State correctional system are generally eligible to earn four kinds of credits against their sentences— credits for good conduct, for performing work tasks assigned to them, for satisfactory progress in vocational or other educational and training courses, and for special work projects. All of those credits are provided for in Maryland Code, Article 27, § 700. Credits for work tasks (five days a month), vocational or educational courses (five days a month), and special projects (up to ten days a month) are awarded monthly, as earned. Credits for good conduct, however, are deducted in advance, subject to being forfeited if the inmate misbehaves in various ways.
Until 1992, good conduct credits were deducted at the rate of five days a month. Section 700 provided, in relevant part, that an inmate was allowed “a deduction in advance from the inmate’s term of confinement” at the rate of five days for each calendar month, “from the first day of commitment to the custody of the Commissioner [of Correction] through the last day of the inmate’s maximum term of confinement.” Md. Code, Art. 27, § 700 (1992 Repl.Vol.). Section 700(a) defined “term of confinement” as
“(1) The length of the sentence for a single sentence; or
(2) The period from the first day of the sentence beginning first through the last day of the sentence ending last for:
(i) Concurrent sentences;
(ii) Partially concurrent sentences;
(iii) Consecutive sentences; or
(iv) A combination of concurrent and consecutive sentences.”
*441That statutory regime worked quite well so long as all inmates were eligible for the same number of monthly credits, regardless of the crime for' which they were sentenced or the dates upon which their respective sentences were imposed. An inmate serving a single ten-year sentence received, in advance, a credit of 600 days (five days per month times 120 months) upon the first day of commitment. An inmate sentenced to two consecutive five year terms also received a credit of 600 days upon the first day of commitment, as his or her sentences were aggregated in accordance with § 700(a) to constitute a single term of confinement, commencing on the first day of the first sentence and ending on the last day of the second sentence.
When, through the application of these and any other credits earned, the inmate served his or her effective sentence, the inmate was released on what is known as mandatory supervision. That term is defined in Article 41, § 4-501(13) of the Code as “a conditional release from imprisonment which is granted to any person sentenced after July 1, 1970 to the jurisdiction of the Division of Correction who has served the term or terms, less the deductions provided for in Article 27, §§ 700 and 704A of the Code.”1 Persons released on mandatory supervision remain in legal custody until expiration of their full term and are subject to all laws, regulations, and conditions applicable to parolees. See Article 41, § 4-612(b) and (c). If they violate the conditions of their mandatory supervision, they may be returned to prison to complete their sentence. How much time they will be required to serve on the preexisting sentence will depend on the extent to which the good conduct credits earned during their previous incarceration (that led to their release) are forfeited, and what, if any, credit is given to them for “street time”—the time they spent out of prison prior to their current infraction.
*442This relatively simple scheme became complicated as the result of 1992 Md. Laws, Ch. 588. In that Act, the General Assembly (1) amended § 700(d)(2).to retain the good conduct credit of five days a month for “an inmate whose term of confinement includes a consecutive or concurrent sentence for either a crime of violence as defined in Article 27, § 643B of the Code or a crime of manufacturing, distributing, dispensing, or possessing a controlled dangerous substance, as provided under Article 27, § 286 of the Code,” and (2) enacted a new § 700(d)(3), to provide that, for all other inmates, “this deduction shall be calculated at the rate of 10 days for each calendar month . . . . ” Section 2 of the Act made the new law applicable “only to a term of confinement imposed on or after October 1, 1992.” Neither the definition of “term of confinement,” in § 700(a), nor the direction in § 700(d)(1) that good conduct credits were to be deducted in advance was changed by Ch. 588.
The 1992 law immediately created a distinction between inmates serving one or more sentences for a crime of violence or a listed drug offense and inmates incarcerated for other crimes. That, when coupled with the prospectivity language of Section 2 of the Act, created a double problem: it brought into question whether an inmate serving a sentence imposed prior to October 1, 1992 as well as a sentence imposed after that date was entitled to the additional five days a month credit on the later sentence and, even if such an inmate ordinarily would get the additional credit, it raised the question of whether that would be the case if the earlier sentence was for a violent or listed drug offense.
The problem first surfaced in Md. House of Correction v. Fields, supra, 348 Md. 245, 703 A.2d 167. In 1988, Fields was sentenced to ten years imprisonment for daytime housebreaking, five years of which were suspended. He received an additional two-year sentence, to be served consecutively, for violating a probation imposed as the result of a possession of heroin conviction. Through the application of various diminution credits, Fields was released on mandatory supervision in 1992. In February, 1994, he was convicted of theft and *443malicious destruction of property, for which he received an eighteen-month sentence. That conviction led to (1) a consecutive six-month sentence for violating one probation, (2) execution of the suspended five-year term for daytime housebreaking, to be served concurrently, and (3) revocation by the Maryland Parole Commission of his mandatory supervision release. As part of the revocation of the mandatory supervision, the Parole Commission rescinded all of the good conduct credits earned prior to Fields’s release but allowed certain credits for “street time.” In accordance with the directions set forth in § 700, the Division of Correction aggregated the three terms of confinement—eighteen months, six months, and five years—into a single seven-year term and awarded new good conduct credits, in advance, against that term at the rate of five days a month. It awarded the five days because it determined that Fields’s “term of confinement” included sentences imposed prior to October 1,1992—the remainder of the sentences imposed in 1988—and that it therefore commenced on the first day of that sentence. Contending that he was entitled to ten days a month credit on the post-October 1,1992 sentences, which would produce a release date eighteen months earlier, Fields filed a petition for habeas corpus.
The Division’s position was based on a strict application of the concept and definition of “term of confinement.” If the inmate was serving a term of confinement that included a sentence imposed prior to October 1, 1992, the inmate continued to receive only five days a month. That would preclude inmates, such as Fields, who received a post-October 1, 1992 sentence for a non-violent, non-drug crime from receiving the benefit of the additional five days a month for that new sentence. We did not believe that the Legislature intended that result. We noted that the intent of the statutory direction to aggregate overlapping or consecutive sentences into a single term of confinement was “to ensure that inmates serving more than one sentence at a time [would] not receive good conduct credits for more than one sentence.” Fields, supra, 348 Md. at 264-65, 703 A.2d at 177. After examining some of the legislative history of Ch. 588, we determined that, *444in this context, the term was ambiguous and needed to be read in a “commonsensical” manner. We observed, for example, that “where an inmate is serving two consecutive sentences, one imposed before October 1, 1992 and one imposed after that date, it would be impossible to say that a single “term of confinement” was imposed either before or after October 1, 1992 because, in fact, the “term of confinement was imposed both before and after that date.” Id. at 266, 703 A.2d at 178.
The ambiguity led us to invoke the rule of lenity, requiring that the ambiguity be construed “against the state and in favor of the [inmate].” Id. at 267, 703 A.2d at 178. Application of that rule required the construction that inmates receiving sentences imposed on or after October 1, 1992 for nonviolent, non-drug offenses were eligible to receive a rate of ten days of good-conduct credits per month with respect to the post-October 1, 1992 sentence. Id. To achieve that end, which was the legislative desire, we rejected “the notion that all sentences that overlap or run consecutively must aggregate for all purposes to a single term of confinement” and, instead, held “that sentences imposed before October 1, 1992 are separable from new sentences imposed after that date.” Id. at 267-68,-703 A.2d at 178 (emphasis added). We decided that “[f]or the purposes of good-conduct credits, new sentences imposed after October 1,1992 should be construed as separate instead of aggregated as part of one single term of confinement,” thereby effectuating the legislative intent that good conduct credits of five days a month be awarded for sentences imposed prior to October 1,1992 and that credits of ten days a month be awarded for non-violent, non-controlled dangerous substance offenses imposed on or after that date. Id. at 268, 703 A.2d at 178. As to Fields, that meant that he would get the five days with respect to the balance of the seven years imposed before October 1, 1992, and ten days for the other sentences.
Beshears v. Wickes, supra, 349 Md. 1, 706 A.2d 608 raised the second aspect of the problem noted above; the factual circumstances were different, but the principle was the same. Wickes had been convicted of rape, a violent crime, in 1979. *445Through the application of diminution credits, he was released on mandatory supervision in 1993. In 1995, he was convicted of a new non-violent, non-drug crime, for which he received a seven-year sentence. When he returned to prison, he was thus serving the balance of his twenty-year sentence for rape and the new seven-year sentence. Because one of those sentences was for a violent crime, the Division of Correction, aggregating the sentences as it had done in Fields, effectively awarded Wickes only five good conduct credits a month on his post-1992 sentence for the non-violent, non-drug crime. Consistent with our approach in Fields, we rejected that result and held that, for purposes of calculating good conduct credits under § 700, a sentence imposed for a non-violent, non-drug related offense on or after October 1,1992 does not aggregate with a sentence for a violent or listed drug offense imposed prior to that date. The result in Wickes really was dictated by our holding in Fields—that the definition of “term of confinement” in § 700(a) should not be read to frustrate the legislative intent that inmates receive ten days a month good conduct credit against sentences imposed for non-violent, non-drug offenses on or after October 1, 1992. Fields could not be denied that benefit on the ground that one of his sentences was imposed prior to October 1,1992, and Wickes could not be denied that benefit on the ground that a pre-October 1, 1992 sentence was for a violent crime.
Unfortunately, we used some language in Wickes that went beyond what was necessary to the decision, and it is that language, rather than the actual holdings in Fields or Wickes, that has led to this case. Going beyond the rule of lenity, which would have dictated the same result in Wickes that was reached in Fields and also confined the ruling to those situations in which strict application of the § 700 definition of “term of confinement” would preclude inmates from receiving the benefit of the 1992 law, we enunciated a broader conclusion that “ ‘term of confinement’ does not aggregate sentences imposed before and after the defendant is released on mandatory supervision.” We stated:
*446“Where a defendant is released on mandatory supervision and later commits and is sentenced for a new crime, we hold that the new sentence and the old sentence reimposed upon revocation of mandatory supervision release do not aggregate to form one term of confinement for the purpose of § 700. The rate at which an inmate is awarded good-conduct credits should not depend on the Maryland Parole Commission’s decision to revoke mandatory supervision release for a prior conviction based on a subsequent offense.”
Wickes, 349 Md. at 9, 706 A.2d at 612.
Applying that “holding,” the Division proceeded to recalculate sentences and release dates for about 2,000 inmates serving multiple sentences, one or more of which was imposed before a release on mandatory supervision or parole and one or more of which was imposed for conduct occurring while the inmate was on mandatory supervision or parole. ' Mr. Henderson was such a person. Henderson was first imprisoned in 1975, upon a conviction for robbery with a deadly weapon. He received a twenty-year sentence, which was due to expire in August, 1995. He was paroled in 1983, but that parole was revoked in 1988. As a result of the revocation and the application of various diminution credits, the expiration date for the 1975 sentence was adjusted to July 8, 1998. In 1991, Henderson was paroled again, but, in July, 1994, he was convicted of a new crime—possession with intent to distribute cocaine—for which he received a ten-year sentence. The expiration date of that sentence was July 4, 2004. By reason of the new conviction, Henderson’s parole was revoked; after the application of various diminution credits, the expiration date of the unserved part of the 1975 sentence became January 17,1999.
Because the 1975 sentence was for a violent crime and the 1994 sentence was for a listed drug crime, Henderson clearly was not eligible for the ten days a month good conduct credit. His situation, therefore, is quite different from that of Fields and Wickes. By aggregating Henderson’s two sentences in accordance with Article 27, § 700(a), the Division of Correction determined his single term of confinement as running *447from August, 1975—the beginning of the twenty-year sentence—to July 4, 2004, the end of the ten-year sentence. Calculation of good conduct credits at the rate of five days per month based on that single term of confinement yielded 1,529 such credits which, when added to other diminution credits earned by Henderson, produced a mandatory supervision release date of July 7,1997, and that is the date he was released.
After reading Wickes, filed some 20 months later, the Division determined that Henderson’s two sentences should not have been aggregated into a single term of confinement, but should be considered separately, thereby producing two different release dates—January 17, 1999 for the 1975 sentence and July 4, 2004 for the 1994 sentence. Applying the various credits to the 1975 sentence produced a mandatory supervision release date of September 11, 1993, but the mandatory supervision release date for the 1994 sentence would not be until February 25, 2002. Upon that determination, the Division issued a “retake warrant” for the arrest of Henderson as an “escaped prisoner.” The face of the warrant charged Henderson with having escaped from the Division of Correction and ordered his immediate apprehension. It stated that the warrant was issued “as a result of a court decision requiring a recalculation of the offender’s term of confinement and will expire on 2002/07/03.” In an accompanying letter, the Division made specific reference to Wickes and advised Henderson, among other things, that that decision “obligates the Division of Correction to begin recalculation of sentences in certain categories,” that the warrant was issued to expedite his return, and that it was not the Division’s intent to charge him with the crime of escape. Henderson was apprehended pursuant to the warrant on May 5, 1998 and returned to the Division’s physical custody. He had been free for about ten months and, so far as this record indicates, had complied in every respect with the conditions of his mandatory supervision. The State conceded that there was no basis, other than the Division’s recalculation of his diminution credits in accordance with the quoted language in Wickes, for his arrest and return to custody. It appears that the Division issued retake *448warrants for 88 other former inmates as well, who, like Henderson, had been released on mandatory supervision based on a pre-Wickes calculation of good conduct credits, and that approximately 53 had, in fact, been apprehended.
Henderson filed a petition for habeas corpus, alleging that his renewed incarceration, effected pursuant to a retroactive application of Wickes, constituted a violation of (1) his Federal and Maryland Constitutional right to due process of law, and (2) Federal and Maryland prohibitions against ex post facto punishment. Judge Kaplan found merit in his complaints and ordered the Division, forthwith, to release Henderson. The judge concluded that Henderson’s re-incarceration (1) constituted a violation of Henderson’s right to due process of law, (2) amounted to an unconstitutional application of an ex post facto law, and (3) was fundamentally unfair. He also questioned whether the State had the authority to arrest Henderson after he had been lawfully released and had committed no violation of the conditions of his release.
Judge Kaplan reviewed briefly our decisions in Fields and Wickes, noting, inferentially, that they rested on the rule of lenity and quoting, in part, our statement in Fields that the rule of lenity forbids the extension of punishment “to cases not plainly within the language” of the statute. Fields, supra, 348 Md. at 267, 703 A.2d at 178 (quoting State v. Fabritz, 276 Md. 416, 422, 348 A.2d 275, 279 (1975)). He observed that neither Fields nor Wickes required the Division “to recalculate the good-time credits accumulated by incarcerated inmates” or indicated that they were to be applied retroactively. Although vigorously contested by the State, Judge Kaplan determined that the State had conceded that its revised method of calculating good time credits, in conformance with the language used in Wickes, created a “new law.” He also concluded that Henderson had a Constitutionally protected liberty interest in continuing on parole (presumably meaning on mandatory supervision release), which cannot be denied without notice and an opportunity for hearing. Those rights, he found, were denied Henderson, who was arrested without notice or the opportunity for hearing. The damage, he said, had already *449been done and was beyond redemption: “[allowing for hearing now, after the fact, to determine whether the State’s calculations are correct, simply does the parolees [sic] no good whatsoever now that the damage is done.”
The due process concerns expressed by Judge Kaplan extended beyond the procedural deficiencies of lack of notice and opportunity for pre-arrest hearing. He also concluded that it was “fundamentally unfair for the State based upon its unilateral interpretation of Wickes to arbitrarily and capriciously recalculate Henderson’s diminution credits and thereby serve to deprive him of his constitutionally protected liberty interests.” In essence, Judge Kaplan found a violation of substantive as well as procedural due process.
Having determined that the revised method of calculating good conduct credits, in accordance with the language used in Wickes, amounted to a “new law,” Judge Kaplan, after examining two Supreme Court cases—Weaver v. Graham, 450 U.S. 24, 101 S.Ct. 960, 67 L.Ed.2d 17 (1981) and Lynce v. Mathis, 519 U.S. 483, 117 S.Ct. 891, 137 L.Ed.2d 63 (1997)—concluded that application of that new law to Henderson, who had already been released under the preexisting law, would amount to the unconstitutional application of an ex post facto law. In reaching that conclusion, he rejected the State’s argument that Henderson’s release was simply the product of the Division’s erroneous construction of the law and that, having been informed by this Court of the error, it was authorized, and obliged, to correct that error.
Upon those findings and conclusions, Judge Kaplan, on May 14, 1998, entered an order declaring that Henderson’s incarceration was unlawful, arbitrary, capricious, and in violation of his Federal and State Constitutional rights. He found that Henderson was entitled to a writ of habeas corpus and ordered the defendants—the Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services and the Commissioner of Correction—to release Henderson immediately and reinstate his mandatory supervision release.
*450The defendants, whom we shall henceforth refer to as the State, promptly noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals, filed a petition for certiorari and a motion for expedited review in this Court, and moved for a stay, first before Judge Kaplan and, when that motion was denied, in this Court. We granted the petition for certiorari and the motion for expedited review but denied the motion for stay, largely because the State informed us that it had already released Henderson (and, it appears, the other 53 inmates who had been re-incarcerated).
Addressing the bases used by Judge Kaplan in ordering Henderson’s release, the State urges that it neither deprived Henderson of due process of law nor applied an ex post facto law. Its position is that, based on this Court’s holdings in Fields and Wickes, Henderson is not entitled to be free, and the State was fully authorized to apprehend and re-incarcerate him. It urges that no new law was applied to Henderson— that the Division of Correction released him because it had misinterpreted the law and, when that misinterpretation was brought to its attention in Fields and Wickes, it simply applied the correct interpretation. Unlike the normal parole violation situation, the State exercised no discretion here, and there were no disputed facts to be resolved through a hearing. Noting our statement in Wickes that “[t]he sentencing of a defendant for a subsequent offense while he is out on mandatory supervision release for a prior offense is a separate sentencing event,” 349 Md. at 11, 706 A.2d at 613, the State believes that “[u]nder this required interpretation of § 700, Mr. Henderson is not entitled to be released until February 25, 2002 ... [and that] [t]he Division of Correction has no authority to exempt Mr. Henderson from completing the term of imprisonment to which he has been sentenced merely because the Division previously calculated his release date erroneously.”
DISCUSSION
As indicated, Judge Kaplan based his determination that Henderson could not be re-incarcerated on due process *451and ex post facto Constitutional grounds. We have generally followed the principle, however, that “ ‘we will not reach a constitutional issue when a case can properly be disposed of on a non-constitutional ground.’ ” Professional Nurses v. Dimensions, 346 Md. 132, 138, 695 A.2d 158, 161 (1997) (quoting State v. Lancaster, 332 Md. 385, 403-04 n. 13, 631 A.2d 453, 463 n. 13 (1993)). We shall follow that principle in this case as well; as there is a valid non-constitutional ground upon which to affirm Judge Kaplan’s order, there is no need for us to opine upon the Constitutional issues.
The sole basis of the Division’s recalculation of Henderson’s good conduct credits was the language we used in Wickes, quoted above, enunciating the view that, whenever an inmate is released on mandatory supervision or parole and commits a new crime, the sentence imposed for that new crime may not be aggregated with the sentence imposed earlier, to form one term of confinement. That, and that alone, is what led the Division to redetermine the mandatory supervision release dates of some 2,000 inmates. That recalculation, we now learn, affects inmates in different ways.
As we indicated above, the expanded “holding” in Wickes, precluding the Division from applying § 700 as it is written whenever an inmate receives a new sentence for conduct occurring while on mandatory supervision, was not necessary in order to reach the result in Wickes. Apart from the significant administrative problems it has caused for the Division, which we perhaps dismissed too quickly, that expanded language actually conflicts with the statutory direction in § 700 and has led to a result directly contrary to what was intended in Fields and Wickes. The predominant reasoning in both cases was that, through the enactment of Ch. 588 in 1992, the General Assembly directed that inmates be allowed ten days a month good conduct credit against sentences imposed on or after October 1, 1992 for non-violent, non-drug offenses, and that, to the extent that the device of a single term of confinement would frustrate that direction, an ambiguity was created—an ambiguity that the rule of lenity required be *452resolved in favor of the inmate.2 That reasoning fully justified the holdings in both cases. All that we said in Fields, and all that we needed to say in Wickes, was that all sentences that overlap or run consecutively do not need to aggregate “for all purposes to a single term of confinement.” (Emphasis added.)
Aggregation was rejected in those cases because it denied the inmates a legislatively mandated benefit. Rejection in this case would have the opposite effect. Section 700(d)(1) states specifically that the good conduct credit is to be deducted in advance “from the inmate’s term of confinement,” and § 700(a)(2) defines precisely how a “term of confinement” is to be calculated when the inmate is serving multiple sentences. Application of the statutory direction to aggregate the sentences produces no ambiguity in this instance; it does not deprive Mr. Henderson or others similarly situated of any legislatively created benefit. In short, his release in July, 1997 was not in contravention of the law but in full accord with it. The Division calculated his good time credits exactly as it should have and properly released him. The error, understandable in light of the noted language used in Wickes, was in recalculating his credits so as to deprive him of the liberty to which he was statutorily entitled. Quite apart from whether the Division unconstitutionally applied some new principle of law retroactively, as Judge Kaplan held, Henderson’s re-incarceration was unlawful because it was not authorized by statute, and he was entitled to be released for that reason.3
*453These three cases—Fields, Wickes, and Henderson—illustrate the different ways in which a statute such as Ch. 588 can affect inmates in our correctional system. In Fields and Wickes, we were dealing with one context and did not need, or really intend, to go beyond it. In articulating a secondary justification for our holding in Wickes, we inadvertently led the Division to a conclusion that was both unintended and erroneous. Fields and Wickes remain good law, based on the ambiguity created in the circumstances of those cases and its resolution through application of the rule of lenity. That rule does not require a departure from the statutory direction in § 700 when, as here, there is no ambiguity.
ORDER AFFIRMED; APPELLANTS TO PAY THE COSTS.
. Section 704A of Article 27 allows for similar credits during any period that the inmate was detained in a correctional facility prior to sentencing. Those credits are applied against the sentence ultimately imposed for the crime.
. As Judge Chasanow so cogently pointed out in Fields, rigid adherence to a single term of confinement approach in the context presented would produce the absurdity of a term of confinement imposed both before and after October 1, 1992. Fields, 348 Md. at 266, 703 A.2d at 178.
. In his dissenting and concurring opinion, Judge Chasanow claims that we have overlooked the effect of § 700(k), which provides that, when an inmate is sentenced to imprisonment for a crime committed while on parole and the parole is revoked, the diminution of credits allowed prior to the inmate’s release on parole may not be applied toward the inmate’s term of confinement upon return to the Division of Correction. We have not overlooked § 700(k). That subsection was not enacted until 1996; it took effect October 1 of that year. The *453conviction, sentence, and parole revocation that led to Henderson’s re-incarceration occurred in 1994. Subsection 700(k) therefore has no application to this case. It will, however, apply to persons on parole who commit new crimes and receive new sentences on or after October 1, 1996 and, subject to any individual defenses that might be raised, will have to be given effect by the Parole Commission and the Division of Correction as to those persons.