Eric A. Glascoe is a District of Columbia prisoner currently held in the United States Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana. Glascoe’s parole application was reviewed and denied under parole guidelines enacted approximately fourteen years after his conviction. Glascoe filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, challenging the denial of parole under the Constitution’s Ex Post Facto Clause. The petition was dismissed by the district court. We affirm.
I. History
Glascoe was convicted of sodomy and assault with intent to commit rape while armed, crimes which involved kidnapping his victim, forcing her to perform oral sex, and attempting to rape her at knifepoint.
Glascoe v. United States,
In 1985, when Glascoe was sentenced, parole decisions were made by the District of Columbia Board of Parole (the “Board”) according to the guidelines it had promulgated in 1981. Under these guidelines, the Board had discretion to grant parole after a prisoner’s minimum sentence had been served if it found “a reasonable probability that [the] prisoner will live and remain at liberty without violating the law, [and] that his release is not incompatible with the welfare of society[.]” 9 D.C.R.R. § 105 (1981). The 1981 guidelines also directed the Board to take into account the following six factors in making its parole determination:
(a) The offense, noting the nature of the violation, mitigating or aggravating circumstances and the activities and adjustment of the offender following arrest if on bond or in the community under any presentence type arrangement.
(b) Prior history of criminality noting the nature and pattern of any prior offenses as they may relate to the current circumstances.
(c) Personal and social history of the offender, including such factors as his family situation, educational development, socialization, marital history, employment history, use of leisure time and prior military experience, if any.
(d) Physical and emotional health and/or problems which may have played a role in the individual’s socialization process, and efforts made to overcome any such problems.
(e) Institutional experience, including information as to the offender’s overall general adjustment, his ability to handle interpersonal relationships, his behavior responses, his planning for himself, setting meaningful goals in areas of academic schooling, vocational education or training, involvements in self-improvement activity and therapy and his utilization of available resources to overcome recognized problems. Achievements in accomplishing goals and efforts put forth in any involvements in established programs to overcome problems are carefully evaluated.
(f) Community resources available to assist the offender with regard to his needs and problems, which will supplement treatment and training programs begun in the institution, and be available to assist the offender to further serve in his efforts to reintegrate himself back into the community and within his family unit as a productive useful individual.
Id. § 105.1.
In 1998, the responsibility for making parole determinations was transferred to the United States Parole Commission (the “Commission”). See D.C.Code § 24-131. The Commission constructed new parole guidelines in 1999, found at 28 C.F.R. § 2.80 (1999). 2 The 1999 guidelines provide for calculation of a parole eligibility score based on point values for certain pre- and post-incarceration factors. See id. The first step in calculating an applicant’s total score is to determine his Salient Factor Score (“SFS”), which is based on the following factors: (1) number of prior convictions adjudicated; (2) prior commitments of more than 30 days; (3) age when offense was committed; (4) recent commitment-free period; (5) probation/parole/confinement/escape violations; and (6) older offender status. See 28 C.F.R. § 2.20 (1999). The SFS is converted to a Base Point Score based on the violence in the underlying offense and other offenses. See 28 C.F.R. § 2.80 (1999). Points may then be added for negative institutional behavior such as assault on a correctional staff member, possession of a weapon, fire-setting, drugs, or rioting. See id. Finally, points may be subtracted for achievement in the area of prison programs, industries, or work assignments. See id. A higher total score translates to a lower likelihood of parole. The 1999 guidelines grant the Commission discretion to make parole decisions outside of the parameters described above in “unusual circumstances” where relevant, case-specific factors that are not adequately taken into account are present. See id.
Approximately two months before Glas-coe’s parole eligibility date, in July 1999, he had a hearing before the Commission. Employing the 1999 guidelines, the Commission denied parole. First, Glascoe was given an SFS based on two prior convictions, no prior commitments of 30 days, his age at the time of the offense (23), and a recent commitment-free period. This SFS was adjusted upward for violence in the underlying offense, so Glascoe had a Base Point Score of 5. Two points were added to that score for negative institutional behavior: fighting with another inmate in 1991, threatening to kill a correctional officer in
Glascoe had been incarcerated at the Sussex II State Prison in Waverly, Virginia, at the time of his parole hearing. Arguing that use of the 1999 guidelines violated the Ex Post Facto Clause, he filed a writ of habeas corpus in the District Court for the District of Columbia in September 2001. Glascoe was later moved to the United States Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana. His petition was transferred to the District Court for the Southern District of Indiana in May 2003. The district court rejected Glascoe’s ex post facto challenge and dismissed his petition with prejudice in September 2003.
II. Analysis
The question of whether the Commission’s application of the 1999 guidelines, as opposed to those in effect at the time of Glascoe’s conviction, violates the Constitution’s Ex Post Facto Clause is a question of law which must be reviewed
de novo. See Rodriguez v. United States,
We addressed an ex post facto challenge to parole guidelines in
Prater v. U.S. Parole Commission,
Glascoe urges that
Prater
must be overruled in light of
Garner,
and that
Garner
compels a review of Glascoe’s parole application under the 1981 guidelines. We do not agree that
Prater
categorically denies the possibility that parole guidelines could be subject to the Ex Post Facto Clause.
See Prater,
In considering whether a facial challenge to the 1999 guidelines in this case can succeed, we find it important that in
Garner
the Supreme Court reversed the Eleventh Circuit, which had supposed that the new parole rule changing frequency of rehearing from every three years to every eight years “ ‘seem[ed] certain’ to result in some prisoners serving extended periods of incarceration.”
Id.
A new rule decreasing the frequency of parole hearings was not deemed facially more onerous for inmates.
Id.; cf. Henderson v. Scott,
'The proper question to ask, then, is whether the new procedure creates a significant risk of increased punishment for Glascoe. This is not to be confused with the question of whether the new parole practice is harsher for a class of prisoners
The answer to this question in Glascoe’s case makes it unnecessary for us to evaluate the government’s argument that the parole procedures under attack in this case are simply discretionary
guidelines,
unlike statutes or the “rules” addressed in
Garner,
and not within the ambit of the Ex Post Facto Clause.
See Warren v. Baskerville,
The Commission denied parole for Glas-coe on the basis of his extremely violent crimes and his institutional misconduct. These factors would have been considered under the 1981 guidelines, which clearly enumerated both as relevant to a parole decision. Moreover, the Commission exercised its discretion — as it would have been entitled to do under the 1981 guidelines as well — to depart from the guidelines and set Glascoe’s rehearing for 60 months later rather than the 18-24 months indicated by Glascoe’s score. Explaining its decision to depart from the guidelines, the Commission stated that Glascoe was “a more serious risk than indicated by [his] Base Point Score,” that he had “deep seated homicidal impulses toward female victims ... not likely to be deterred by [his] present incarceration,” and that his “prison record further indicates that prison programming is not likely to achieve ... rehabilitation within the time frame allowed by [his] point score.” There can be no doubt that the Commission would have denied parole for Glascoe had it been operating under the 1981 guidelines, which only allowed parole if the released prisoner would “live in society without violating his parole conditions” and “release was not incompatible with the welfare of society.” At the most, “it is only remote speculation to suggest that the application of the [1999 guidelines] in Mr. [Glascoe’s] case will increase his
Glascoe asserts that he is entitled, at a minimum, to a remand and a chance to engage in discovery to show that a change in parole guidelines adversely impacted his application. Discovery in habeas corpus actions is extremely limited.
See Bracy v. Gramley,
III. Conclusion
There might be a case where application of the 1999 guidelines rather than the 1981 guidelines substantially increases an inmate’s risk of increased punishment so as to violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. There might also be a case where discovery could be required to determine whether or not an inmate would fare worse under the later guidelines. But this is not such a case; the record shows that Glascoe would have been denied parole under either set of guidelines, and there is no ex post facto violation. The district court’s dismissal of Glascoe’s petition for writ of habeas corpus is AffiRmed.
Notes
. The Sentence Computation Forms included in Glascoe’s appendix also indicate a parole eligibility date of September 23, 1999, and an aggregated minimum term of 21 years and 4 months. Considering that the offenses were committed in late 1983, it is unclear how the 21 years and 4 months were served by 1999; nevertheless, because both sides agree that Glascoe was eligible for parole in 1999, we proceed to the merits of Glascoe's challenge.
. The 1999 guidelines no longer apply to District of Columbia offenders as they were replaced by another set of presumptive guidelines. See 28 C.F.R. § 2.80 (2004).
. Glascoe received a one-point reduction for ''ordinary'' achievement in prison programs. Two points may be deducted for ''superior” program achievement, and per the guidelines, ''[t]he Commission may, in its discretion, grant more than a 2 point deduction” in exceptional cases. 28 C.F.R. § 2.80 (1999).
