Appellant Stanley Faulder, now sentenced to be executed on June 17, 1999, appeals from the district court’s rejection of his due process challenge to the procedures used by the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. We find no error and affirm.
Faulder has been tried and sentenced to death twice for murdering Inez Phillips in the course of committing aggravated robbery. He has received dispositions on three state habeas petitions and one federal habeas petition. He has participated in state court civil litigation regarding the clemency policies of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles (the Board).
The instant case was filed against the Board on December 8,1998, shortly before a previously scheduled execution date, in order to contest the state’s clemency procedures under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court temporarily stayed Faulder’s execution, but this court granted the Board’s motion to vacate the stay, and this court then denied Faulder’s motion for en banc reconsideration. The Supreme Court, however, stayed Faulder’s execution pending a writ of certiorari from one of his state habeas petitions. The Court denied cert. on January 25, 1999.
Faulder v. Texas,
— U.S.-,
On appeal, Faulder argues that the Board’s procedures do not meet “minimal due process” standards principally because the Board allegedly violated applicable state law and its own regulations, and Faulder received inadequate notice of issues the Board would consider. 1 In addition, Faulder alleges conclusionally in his brief that the Board acts in secrecy, refuses to hold hearings, gives no reasons for its decisions, and keeps no records of its actions. He describes the Board’s action as “an arbitrary exercise of administrative power.”
These contentions are meritless. In
Ohio Adult Parole Authority v. Woodard,
Faulder’s clemency procedures exhibited neither of these extreme situations. The federal district court conscientiously explained the Board’s procedures and the *345 liberal, non-evidentiary rules permitting Faulder to submit any information he thought appropriate to the Board’s decision. Board members testified at length about their decision-making processes. The Board members reviewed the information they believed material to Faulder’s request, and each one independently determined whether clemency ought to be recommended. The Board staff furnished members with Faulder’s or his family’s submissions and with such other information as was relevant or useful. We need not go further in advising the Board what procedures it might choose to adopt in the future, because what they did in this case complied with the constitutional minimum set forth in Woodard.
Further, this court has previously rejected arguments against the constitutionality of Texas’s clemency procedures for essentially the same reasons stated by the district court in this case.
Moody v. Rodriguez,
Taken either individually or cumulatively under the facts of this case, none of the objections that Faulder raises to the Board’s procedures represents an essential component of due process. Procedural due process is an inherently flexible concept. And Woodard emphasizes that extra flexibility is required when, as here, the criminal process has reached an end and a highly individualized and merciful decision like executive clemency is at issue. Faulder had ample opportunity to present his best case to the Board, and the Board gave it appropriate consideration.
For these reasons, the judgement of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Faulder’s motion to stay execution is DENIED. Moody v. Rodriguez, supra note 1.
Notes
. This court has jurisdiction over the district court's final judgment adjudicating the section 1983 claim. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Unlike the request for a stay of execution, the district court’s judgment did not purport to interfere with the state’s carrying out of the death penalty, an action that this court earlier considered an infringement on habeas corpus jurisdiction.
See Moody v. Rodriguez,
