Petitioner, presently incarcerated on two life sentences for two counts of murder, filed a pro se complaint attacking the denial of parole and asserting that he is being denied equal protection and due process of law under the fourteenth amendment in that the Mississippi Parole Statute is unconstitutional. The district court dismissed on the dual bases that the statute is not unconstitutional and that petitioner’s complaint directed to his own parole determination sounds in habeas corpus and requires exhaustion of state remedies. We affirm.
After the district court affirmed the magistrate’s recommendation in this case, the Supreme Court decided
Board of Pardons v. Allen,
— U.S.-,
(1) Every prisoner ... whose record of conduct shows that such prisoner has observed the rules of the penitentiary, and who has served not less than one-fourth (lh) of the total of such term or terms for which such prisoner was sentenced, or, if sentenced to serve a term or terms of thirty (30) years or more, or, if sentenced for the term of the natural life of such prisoner, has served not less than ten (10) years of such life sentence, may be released on parole ...”
(emphasis added). The Montana statute, like the Nebraska statute examined earlier by the Supreme Court in
Greenholtz v. Nebraska Penal Inmates,
To the extent petitioner is seeking a reduction of the length of his sentence (he asserts his state sentences should not be run consecutively), this presents a matter to be determined in the first instance on application for habeas corpus, prior to which petitioner must exhaust his state remedies.
We therefore AFFIRM the decision of the district court dismissing petitioner’s constitutional claims but dismissing without prejudice his unexhausted habeas claim.
Notes
. Petitioner's additional contention that he is denied equal protection because only one black person is a member of the Mississippi Parole Board is meritless.
