Vermont inmates serving terms of imprisonment may earn reductions in their minimum and maximum terms by participating in treatment, educational or vocational training programs offered by the Department of Corrections (DOC). See 28 V.S.A. § 811(b).
In 1997, petitioner Charles Conway began serving a three-to-five-year sentence at Northwest State Correctional Facility for a conviction оf lewd-and-lascivious behavior with a child. That year, he began participating in the correctional facility’s Cognitive Self Change program. As a participant in the program, petitioner had the opportunity to earn up to ten days of discretionary good-time credit рer month. See 28 V.S.A. § 811(b) (inmate who participates in program may earn up to ten days good-time credit per month) (emphasis added). This was in addition to the five days of good-time credit per month mandated by § 811(a). See id. § 811(a) (inmate shall earn five days good-time credit “for each month during which the inmate has faithfully observed all the rules and regulations of the institution”) (emphasis added). In 1998, three inmates alleged that petitioner had engaged in sexual behavior and made inappropriate sexual comments
Courts “examine procedural due process questions in two steps: the first asks whether there exists a liberty or propеrty interest which has been interfered with by the State; the second examines whether the procedures attendant upon that deprivation were constitutionally sufficient.” Kentucky Dep’t of Corrections v. Thompson,
In Sandin v. Conner,
The United States Supreme Court reversed, holding that no procedural process was due because Conner had no liberty interest in remaining free from solitary confinement. See id. at 486. The Court reasoned that (1) subjecting Conner to solitary confinement for thirty days did not “work a major disruption in his environment,” id.; (2) placing Conner in solitary confinement wоuld not “inevitably affect the duration of his sentence,” since under state law the parole board’s decision of whether to grant or deny parole was discretionary, id. at 487; and (3) solitary confinement is “within the range of confinement to be normally expected for one serving аn indeterminate term of 30 years to life.” Id. Thus, according to the Court, subjecting Conner to solitary confinement for thirty days did not impose an atypical-and-significant hardship upon him, and therefore, under the United States Constitution, he had no state-created liberty interest in remaining free from sоlitary confinement.
Our most recent opportunity to review a claim by inmates that a DOC policy violated their due process rights under the Vermont Constitution was presented in Parker v. Gorczyk,
We first concluded that the plaintiffs’ interest in the possibility of obtaining furlough prior to the expiration of thеir minimum sentences was “sharply limited,” stating:
[P]laintiffs are concerned with obtaining eligibility for furlough rather than maintaining an already realized conditional freedom. Conceding that they are not necessarily entitled to furlough, plaintiffs ask only for individual furlough assessments that may or may not result in their obtaining furlough. As Judge Henry Friendly cogently noted, “there is a human difference between losing what one has and not getting what one wants.” Without deciding whether revocation of furlough implicates due process protections under the Vermont Constitution, we conclude that plaintiffs’ anticipation of furlough is a less significant interest than if they were defending against revocation of furlough.
Id. at 274,
Second, in examining the potential impact of any decision resulting in the deprivation of the alleged interest, we found the plaintiffs’ argument that prisoners who attained furlough status had a bettеr chance for parole to be speculative and unsupported by the evidence presented below. See id. at 274,
In this case, we find no liberty interest implicated under either the United States Constitution or the Vermont Constitution, and thus, nо violation of petitioner’s due process rights.
First, petitioner was sentenced to three to five years’ imprisonment. Depriving him of the opportunity to earn additional good-time credits did not “work a major disruption in his environment.” Conner,
The result is the same under the Vermont Constitution. First, as noted, the decision of whether to grant good-time credits to an inmate who has successfully participated in a prison program is discretionary. Therefore, whether petitioner would actually earn good-time credits if he successfully participated in the program is speculаtive. Further, petitioner was not deprived of any good-time credits he previously earned. Thus, as in Parker, petitioner is aggrieved not because he is losing what he already has, but because he is not getting what he wants. See Parker,
As previously noted, a plaintiff is only entitled to procedural due process protections once he has demonstrated that he has a liberty interest in the action being challenged. Thus, because we conclude that petitioner has no liberty interest in remaining in the program, we do not address whether the processes employed were sufficient.
Affirmed.
Notes
28 YS.A. § 811(b) was amended effective July 1,2000, and, as of that date, provides for reductions only in inmates’ maximum terms. See 1999, No. 127 (Ac(j. Sess.), § 1. The amendment has no bearing on this case, however, as § 2 of the amended statute provides that the above-mentioned provision is applicable only to “persons who commit offenses on or after the effective date of this act.” Id.
Specifically, petitioner argued he was not provided advance written notice of the hearing; he was not given an opportunity to confront and cross-examine his accusers; and the team should have, but failed to, employ a preponderance-of-the-evidenee standard in determining whether petitioner had committed the alleged acts.
Petitioner’s original complaint alleged that his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution had been violated. However, in his reply to the motion for summary judgment filed on behalf of the Commissioner, he alleged that his rights under the Vermont Constitution had been violated, as well. Before this Court, he alleged that his rights under both the United States Constitution and the Vermont Constitution were violated.
It is undisputed that petitioner has lost no previously accrued good-time credits as a result of his removal from the program.
