DALY CITY — Relatives of three children who were killed by their mother two decades ago are asking Gov. Jerry Brown to reject a parole board’s recommendation to release her from prison.

The bodies of 2-year-old Alexandra Hogg, 3-year-old Angelique Roberts and 7-year-old Antoinette Marden were found in their bedroom on the morning of March 23, 1998. They had been suffocated with duct tape.

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Their mother, Megan Hogg, later pleaded no contest to three counts of first-degree murder and was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

Over the objections of the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office, California Board of Parole commissioners Terry Turner and Tim O’Hara decided Hogg no longer posed an “unreasonable risk of danger” to the public and found her suitable for parole at a hearing on April 10.

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Prosecutors noted that Hogg had dealt drugs in prison and violated numerous other rules.

“Hogg was recently approved for parole by the state prison review board,” relatives of the victims said in a news release issued Thursday through San Mateo County Supervisor David Canepa. “Yet not one member of the victims’ families were contacted by the prison review board and she has not served even the minimum of 25 years.”

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Brown has final say over whether Hogg is paroled.

Relatives of the victims are planning to gather for a press conference at Daly City Hall on Friday afternoon “to speak directly to the governor about this tragedy and our wish that Ms. Hogg not be granted parole as she remains a threat to society and because the trauma that she caused our family continues to make us fearful of the continued and future threat that she will be to society,” according to the news release.