Eddie Paul Harris appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Appellee Hammonds, Chairman of the State Board of Pardons and Paroles, and denying Harris’s cross motion for summary judgment in his pro se civil rights complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This action arose after Harris, a Georgia inmate serving a life sentence, received notice that his next parole-reconsideration hearing would be held in October 2000, five years after the last hearing, pursuant to Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 475-3-.05(2) (1986). Harris’s sole claim on appeal is that the retroactive application of Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 475-3-05(2) (1986), which as amended requires a parole-reconsideration hearing at least once every eight years, instead of annually as required at the time Harris committed his offense, violates the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution.
This Court reviews a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Hale v. Tallapoosa County,
The facts and procedural history are straightforward. In August 1996, Harris filed a habeas petition, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, in the Southern District of Georgia, raising one claim: that the retroactive application of Ga. Comp. R. & Regs, r. 475-3-05(2) (1986), which as amended requires a parole-reconsideration hearing at least once every eight years, violates the Ex Post Facto Clause. The petition was ultimately transferred to the Northern District of Georgia and proceeded as a Section 1983 action. In the petition, Harris alleged that he had pled guilty in state court to murder in 1969 and was sentenced to life imprisonment. He further alleged that, at the time he committed the offense, the rules of the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles required the Board initially to consider parole for an inmate serving a life sentence after the inmate had served seven years, and if denied, the Board would reconsider parole annually. The Board reconsidered Harris’s parole annually until 1985, when he was paroled. After his parole was revoked in 1990, the Board considered annually whether to again grant him parole until December 1995, when, pursuant to a 1986 amendment to the Board’s rules, Harris was notified that his next review would not be until 2000. Harris claimed that he appealed the Board’s decision in February 1996, but received no response. He also claimed that it would be futile to seek relief in the Georgia state courts.
Various documents filed in support of Harris’s petition indicated that his parole eligibility had been reconsidered annually, despite amendments lengthening the time between required reconsideration, based on this Court’s opinion in
Akins v. Snow,
In December 1995, therefore, the Board notified Harris that it had again decided to deny him parole, noting that “[t]he main reasons for the decision cited by the Board members during their individual study of your case are circumstances and nature of the offense.” The notice stated that Harris would be reconsidered for parole in October 2000.
This Court has already twice considered whether the retroactive application of Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 475-3-05(2), providing for parole reconsideration every eight years, violates the Ex Post Facto Clause. We first held in
Akins
that retroactive application violates the Ex Post Facto Clause when applied to inmates who had been entitled to more frequent parole reconsideration hearings when their crimes were committed.
In
Jones v. Garner,
Recently, however, the Supreme Court reversed and remanded
Jones,
determining that the panel’s analysis “failed to reveal whether the amendment to Rule 475-3-05(2), in its operation, created a significant risk of increased punishment for respondent.” Garn
er v. Jones,
—— U.S. - — -,
[w]hen the rule does not by its own terms show a significant risk, the [prisoner challenging the retroactive application to the amendment] must demonstrate, by evidence drawn from the rule’s practical implementation by the agency charged with exercising discretion, that its retroactive application will result in a longer period of incarceration than under the earlier rule.
Id.
at 1370. Thus, the Court concluded that Jones “must show that as applied to his own sentence the law created a significant risk of increasing his punishment.”
Id.
The Court instructed that “[t]his remains the issue in the case, though the general operation of the Georgia parole system may produce relevant evidence and inform further analysis on the point.”
Id.
Further, the Supreme Court found that the record before the Eleventh Circuit
The Supreme Court’s opinion in Jones does not resolve the issue of whether the amendment to Rule 475-3-05(2), in its operation, violates the Ex Post Facto Clause when applied to inmates who had been entitled to more frequent reconsideration hearings when they committed their crimes. Rather, it requires the district court to consider evidence of “the general operation of the Georgia parole system” and any other evidence a prisoner challenging the regulation may produce that the amended parole regulation, “as applied to his own sentence,” “created a significant risk of increasing his punishment.” Thus, it appears that an analysis of claims that Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 475-3- 05(2) violates the Ex Post Facto Clause when applied to inmates who had been entitled to more frequent parole reconsideration at the time they committed their crimes must be made on a case-by-case basis.
In this case, neither the district court nor the parties had the benefit of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Jones during the proceedings before the district court. Therefore, we vacate the district court’s order granting summary judgment and remand to provide Harris with the opportunity to make the showing required by the Supreme Court in Jones.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
