399 A.2d 843 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1978
The issue involved here is whether a writ of habeas corpus will lie to have warrants or detainers declared void and removed from the plaintiff's department of correction file if that removal will entitle him to participate in prisoner treatment and rehabilitation programs, including furlough privileges and parole.
The writ of habeas corpus is available to a person restrained of his liberty who desires a hearing to determine the legality of his detention. Wojculewicz
v. Cummings,
Thus, the conclusion to be drawn is that, today, a writ of habeas corpus may be directed either at the judgment or at the nature of the detention. Necessarily, however, the only rights with which the court is concerned are those founded in the constitution or thought to be of a substantial character. In short, the plaintiff should be deprived of only those rights which the law requires that he be deprived of for his crime. Coffin v. Reichard,
This is a case of first impression in Connecticut. There is no case law in this state regarding the question of whether a right to furlough or to participate in a rehabilitative program is to be protected by a writ of habeas corpus. In Walker v. Wheeler,
This court could find no other precedent broadening the scope of the writ of habeas corpus beyond the decision in Walker. Research revealed no case law which has held that the right to furlough or *119 to participate in rehabilitative programs was equivalent to nonconfinement, as parole is viewed inWalker.
Therefore, a writ of habeas corpus will not lie for the right to furlough or to participate in rehabilitative programs.
For those reasons, the petition is dismissed.