OPINION OF THE COURT
The Warden of the U. S. Penitentiary at Lewisburg brings this appeal from an Order of the District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania granting a federal prisoner’s petition, filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The District Court ordered the Warden to restore to petitioner 62 days of good time that the Good Time Forfeiture Board had ordered forfeited. The question presented is whether the Bureau of Prisons is required to restore good time forfeited by a prisoner for violation of an institutional rule forbidding escape where the prisoner subsequently is acquitted on criminal charges of escape flowing from the same incident.
I.
Petitioner David Lee Rusher was serving concurrent three-year prison terms at Al-lenwood Federal Prison Camp following convictions for bail jumping 1 and interstate transportation of forged securities. 2 On March 16, 1975, prison authorities discovered that Rusher was absent from the prison without permission. On the morning of the same day agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested him at his home. Prison authorities promptly charged Rusher administratively for the escape, and on March 18 he appeared before the Good Time Forfeiture Board which met in the Union County Jail, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, where Rusher was then confined. Rusher admitted that he had been absent without permission, but he claimed that he had simply gone home to attend to pressing family matters and that he had intended to return to prison. The Board found him guilty of escape and ordered that 62 days of good time that Rusher had accumulated be forfeited. On March 25, 1975, an indictment was returned in the Middle District of Pennsylvania charging petitioner with escape from federal custody in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 751(a) (Criminal No. 75-78, M.D. Pa.), and on June 13, 1975, petitioner was acquitted following a jury trial. He then applied to the Bureau of Prisons for restoration of the 62 days good time that earlier had been forfeited. Upon being informed by the Warden that his acquittal on the criminal charges did not undo the previously imposed administrative discipline, he filed his petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
The district judge, relying on his earlier decision in
Barrows v. Hogan,
The holding of a jury of 12 men and women is a final determination against the Government on the question of whether Petitioner assaulted the officer. *898 In view of the judicial determination that this prisoner is not guilty of the offense charged, it is impermissible for the prison administration to determine otherwise and punish the prisoner for an offense as to which he has been acquitted.379 F.Supp., at 316 .
Because we do not believe that an acquittal on criminal charges forecloses the prison administration from imposing disciplinary measures for infraction of prison rules, even though both the indictment and the prison discipline arise from the same incident, we reverse.
II.
Rusher has no quarrel with the procedures by which his prison discipline was adjudicated. See Wolff v. McDonnell, supra. Nor does he question the substantive correctness of the decision of the Board when it was first made. The brunt of his attack is the correctness of the decision of the prison officials not to restore to him the forfeited good time. The unarticulated premise undergirding the Order of the District Court appears to be that notions of fundamental fairness embodied in the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment are violated by permitting a federal prison to discipline an inmate for a violation of prison rules where the prisoner is subsequently acquitted on criminal charges stemming from the same incident.
In
Wolff v. McDonnell, supra,
the Supreme Court held that state prisoners have a liberty interest in accumulated good time credits, and that these credits may not be revoked by the state for serious misconduct without according to the prisoner certain minimum procedural requirements of due process of law.
Similarly, fundamental differences in the balance of state and individual interests between a criminal trial and a prison disciplinary proceeding persuade us that there is no fundamental unfairness in a procedure whereby a prisoner is punished administratively for the same conduct that resulted in an acquittal on criminal charges. Nowhere is the individual’s liberty interest greater than in the face of a criminal charge. A presumptively innocent person stands to suffer loss of freedom and the stigma of being branded a convicted felon.
In re Winship,
The Fifth Amendment accords the Attorney General considerably more flexibility in carrying out his correctional duties than in securing criminal convictions in the first instance. This flexibility is manifested in two respects. First, in order to minimize the risk of mistaken convictions, the Government bears the burden in criminal cases of proving every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Mullaney v. Wilbur,
Our conclusion that the inability of the Government to meet its burden of persuasion in criminal cases is no bar to other non-criminal sanctions based upon a less stringent burden is reinforced by authority in two similar contexts. In
United States v. Chambers,
Likewise, an acquittal on charges of willfully and knowingly smuggling undeclared merchandise into the United States with intent to defraud the Government in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 545, does not bar subsequent forfeiture proceedings against the same merchandise as smuggled goods. In
One Lot of Emerald Cut Stones v. United States,
“. . the difference in the burden of proof in criminal and civil cases precludes application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel. The acquittal of the criminal charges may have only represented ‘ “an adjudication that the proof was not suffi *900 cient to overcome all reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused.” ’ Helvering v. Mitchell,303 U.S. 391 , 397 [58 S.Ct. 630 , 632,82 L.Ed. 917 ] (1938). As to the issues raised, it does not constitute an adjudication on the preponderance-of-the-evidence burden applicable in civil proceedings.”409 U.S. at 235 ,93 S.Ct. at 492 . 8
The second reason for permitting prison authorities to discipline conduct for which a prisoner has been tried and acquitted lies in the fact that a very different record may be compiled at the disciplinary hearing. In the first place, some aspects of procedural due process that are available in a prisoner’s defense at the criminal trial are not required at the disciplinary hearing. A prisoner has no right to representation by counsel at his hearing,
Baxter v. Palmigiano,
III.
The judgment of the District Court will be reversed.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 3150.
. 18 U.S.C. § 2314.
. 18 U.S.C. § 111.
.
Cf. Morrissey v. Brewer,
. Section 4161 reads as follows:
Each prisoner convicted of an offense against the United States and confined in a penal or correctional institution for a definite term other than for life, whose record of conduct shows that he has faithfully observed all the rules and has not been subjected to punishment, shall be entitled to a deduction from the term of his sentence beginning with the day on which the sentence commences to run
. Section 4165 reads as follows:
If during the term of imprisonment a prisoner commits any offense or violates the rules of the institution, all or any part of his earned good time may be forfeited.
. Section 4166 reads as follows:
The Attorney General may restore any forfeited or lost good time or such portion thereof as he deems proper upon recommendation of the Director of the Bureau of Prisons.
. Rusher lays no claim to the benefit of the collateral estoppel doctrine. Indeed he could not do so since he seeks to use an acquittal to invalidate the factual basis for a prior administrative finding. However, the reasoning of the Supreme Court in One Lot of Emerald Cut Stones, supra, is no less persuasive where Rusher claims that application of the substantive standards of fairness embodied in the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment dictate that a determination of facts favorable to a criminal defendant nullifies an earlier unfavorable determination in an administrative proceeding that imposed a less rigorous burden of proof on the Government.
. This may be just such a case where different records compiled before the different factfind-ers explain the finding that Rusher did not “escape” for purposes of criminal liability and that he did “escape” for purposes of prison discipline. Although we do not have before us the transcript of the criminal trial, Rusher and the Bureau of Prisons are in agreement that the reason for the acquittal was a successful entrapment defense. Rusher did not deny leaving the prison without permission at his trial; instead he testified that he was lured away by a Government informant. While these circumstances may have been sufficient to submit the entrapment question to a jury, the Good Time Forfeiture Board certainly was under no compulsion to pay heed to an entrapment defense. Indeed it appears that the entrapment defense was not presented to the Bureau of Prisons until Rusher took an administrative appeal from the adverse decision of the Good Time Forfeiture Board. Compare App. B8 with App. B14.
