The Warden of the State of New Mexico appeals the district court’s grant of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, to Mr. Stephens. The district court determined that Mr. Stephens’ good time credits were forfeited without procedural or substantive due process. Mr. Stephens cross-appeals challenging the district court’s rejection of his claims under the Equal Protection Clause and the Ex Post Facto Clause. Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 2253 and we reverse.
Background
Mr. Stephens was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. He was also convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to a consecutive ten- to fifty-year term. He has been incarcerated since 1978. On April 30, 1984, after having served six years and four months on his life sentence, Mr. Stephens was paroled “in house” from his life sentence to his armed robbery sentence. This parole date was the result of using good-time credits to reduce the legislative ten-year parole eligibility minimum for life sentences. On November 20, 1986, Mr. Stephens was notified that his conditional *500 parole date on the armed robbery conviction was set for November 24,1987, and he would then be released.
On November 20, 1987, however, the Parole Board rescinded both the life sentence parole and the conditional armed robbery parole. While it had been common practice to reduce the minimum sentences of life terms with good-time credits, the Parole Board was notified on that day by the Attorney General that the ten-year mínimums for life sentences could not be reduced. This adjustment was made, however, only to the sentences of those inmates who had not yet been released from prison. Prisoners who were released from incarceration before they finished serving their ten-year mínimums did not have their paroles revoked.
Mr. Stephens contended that he was penalized retroactively by an ex post facto law, his procedural and substantive due process rights were violated, and the different treatment of released and detained prisoners violated the Equal Protection Clause, all in violation of the U.S. Constitution. The district court determined that the procedural and substantive due process claims were the only ones with merit and granted the writ, ordering Mr. Stephens “unconditionally released unless the parole board determines conditions of release within 90 days.” Aplt.App. at A-25. We stayed the district court’s judgment pending appeal.
We address Mr. Stephens’ claims each in turn, thereby reaching all arguments raised on appeal and cross-appeal. All of the issues are questions of law which we review de novo.
See Lustgarden v. Gunter,
Discussion
I. Ex Post Facto Clause
A law violates the Ex Post Facto Clause when it punishes behavior which was not punishable at the time it was committed or increases the punishment beyond the level imposed at the time of commission.
See
U.S. Const, art. 1, § 10, cl. 1;
Collins v. Youngblood,
Before 1955, the pertinent good time statute did not benefit those sentenced to life imprisonment.
See Welch v. McDonald,
We have held that when the current interpretation of a statute is foreseeable, there can be no Ex Post Facto Clause violation.
Lustgarden v. Gunter,
*501
Mr. Stephens relies on
Knuck v. Wainwright,
Because the Department of Corrections revoked Mr. Stephens’ erroneous parole as an immediate result of the Attorney General’s directive, and the correct interpretation was foreseeable, there is no ex post facto violation.
II. Due Process
A state inmate’s due process rights are implicated only when a state’s actions impinge on a protected liberty interest.
Vitek v. Jones,
III. Equal Protection
Mr. Stephens argues that refusing to apply his good time credits, while declining to revoke the paroles of those erroneously released inmates whose ten-year mínimums still had not expired, violates equal protection. Mr. Stephens has not shown, however, that he is similarly situated with those who were released.
See Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, Inc.,
However, even assuming Mr. Stephens is in the same class as parolees who were released from prison altogether, his equal protection claim does not succeed. In the absence of a fundamental right or membership in a protected class, where the state has a rational basis for treating the classes differently, the Equal Protection Clause is not violated.
Edwards v. Valdez,
The state advanced the rationale that it was reasonable not to rearrest parolees who had successfully reintegrated into society, citing
Johnson v. Williford,
REVERSED.
