Opinion PER CURIAM.
Pеtitioner Wilton Chatman-Bey, a federal prisoner, commenced a proceeding in the district court seeking mandamus or habeas corpus relief. The district court, invoking 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) (change of venue), directed a transfer of Chatman-Bey’s case to the district embracing the place at which he is incarcerated. The court ordered the transfer on its own motion and without indication from any party that this forum would be inconvenient. A few months ago, we vacated a transfer order similarly directed to a prisoner’s claim and similarly entered on the court’s own motion without request or suggestion from any party; our opinion cautioned that “such action, if ever appropriate, should be reserved for exceptional circumstances.”
In re Scott,
I. Background
Wilton Chatman-Bey is a federal prisoner incarcerated in the federal penitentiary at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. He is serving consecutive sentences for violations of both the United Statеs Code and the District of Columbia Code. 1 In August 1981, the records office at Lewisburg prepared a sentence computation report that set ChatmanBey’s eligibility for parole at October 1999. Chatman-Bey objected to this determination; he claimed that the Federal Bureau of Prisons (FBP) imрroperly deferred his parole eligibility pending his service of the minimum terms of both his federal and District of Columbia sentences. He then filed timely but unsuccessful appeals to his prison case worker, the warden at Lewis-burg, the FBP Regional Director in Philadelphia, and the FBP General Counsel in Washingtоn, D.C.
Having exhausted these administrative remedies, Chatman-Bey filed pro se in the district court a petition for a writ of mandamus or habeas corpus. Chatman-Bey v. Smith, C.A. No. 83-1140 (D.D.C. filed April 20, 1983). Chatman-Bey’s petition named five defendants — the Attorney General, the FBP General Counsel, the FBP Director, the warden at Lewisburg, and the U.S. Parole Cоmmission — and sought a court order declaring him eligible for parole in October 1991, rather than 1999.
The district court, without awaiting service of the petition on the named defendants, sua sponte issued an order to show cause why the case should not be transfer *486 red to the Middle District of Pennsylvania. Chatman-Bey filed а timely and detailed response, arguing that his case presented a purely legal challenge to FBP sentence computation policy, and that none of the traditional venue considerations favored transfer to Pennsylvania. 2 Immediately upon receipt of Chatman-Bey’s response, the district judge entered an order predicated upon 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) transferring the case to Pennsylvania; the transfer order stated, without elaboration, that “no adequate response” to the show cause order had been filed. 3
Chatman-Bey then filed a petition for a writ оf mandamus in this court seeking vacation of the transfer order. Because we were unable to identify the basis for transfer, we deferred ruling on the petition, retained jurisdiction, and directed the district court to state the reasons for its decision.
See In re Pope,
II. Analysis
Mandamus is “a drastic [remedy], to be invoked only in extraordinary situations.”
Allied Chemical Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc.,
Recently, in
In re Scott,
In ruling on Scott’s petition for mandamus, this court said:
The broad language of section 1404(a) would seem to permit a court to order transfer on its own motion. Nevertheless, we think such action, if ever appropriate, should be reserved for exceptional circumstances.
Id. at 721 (footnote omitted). After examining the circumstances of Scott’s case, we concluded that the district court had abused its discretion by ordering a transfer. Scott had filed his cоmplaint in a court of appropriate jurisdiction and proper venue. 6 The district judge’s proffered explanation — that he ordered transfer because of the burden imposed on the district court by the large number of in forma pauperis suits filed in this circuit — did not place Scott’s case within the group оf exceptional situations in which a court’s sua sponte rejection of the plaintiff’s choice of forum might be justified. Accordingly, we vacated the transfer order and remanded the case to the district court.
Our decision in Scott emphasized that transfer on a court’s own motion is strongly disfavored. Here, as in Scott, we cоnclude that the transfer order is not justified by any set of exceptional circumstances.
Initially, we note that venue is proper in this circuit. Chatman-Bey is challenging the FBP’s computation of his parole eligibility date. In the district court, he requested alternative remedies: federal habeаs corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241, and mandamus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1361.
7
While this court has not decided
*488
whether habeas is available to a prisoner alleging an unlawful denial of parole consideration,
8
we have ruled that an alleged improper denial of a parole hearing can be challenged by a petition for a writ of mandamus.
See Goode v. Markley,
Because the petition was properly filed here, we must decide “whether the district court abused its discretion in ordering a transfer of [petitioner’s] complaint
sua sponte
and for the reason[s] stated.”
In re Scott,
In the context of this case, however, the reasons offered by the district court do not furnish any valid ground for transfer. Indeed, the court’s statement reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of petitioner’s complaint. Chatman-Bey is attacking the FBP’s method of computing parole eligibility for prisoners serving consecutive federal and District of Columbia sentences. He raises a purely legal issuе, which requires no trial court factfinding. There is no possibility that Chatman-Bey’s testimony will be required to resolve the question he presents; his availability in Pennsylvania therefore provides no reason for transfer.
See Starnes v. McGuire,
Moreover, nothing in Chatman-Bey’s complaint ties his claim to the Middle District of Pennsylvania. The warden at Lewisburg does not “mak[e] the rules” with respect to petitioner’s parole eligibility. While the initial computation did take place at Lewisburg, the еligibility date was recomputed by the FBP Regional Director, and that decision was approved by the FBP General Counsel here in Washington. Resolution of Chatman-Bey’s complaint, it should be apparent, will not turn on the place at which he is incarcerated. Rather, he seeks a ruling on federal parole eligibility policies applicable throughout the country, policies no more readily amenable to judicial review in Pennsylvania than in this circuit. 9 ' Consequently, we can find no acceptable justification for the district court’s decision to transfer this case sua sponte. 10
III. Conclusion
Althоugh a district court has broad authority to order a transfer under section
*489
1404(a), this petition “presents the rare case in which a transfer order clearly fails to evince a tolerable basis.”
In re Scott,
this juncture unopposed by any party, deserved greater regard than it was given by the district court. Accordingly, we vacate the transfer order, and remand the case to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Chatman-Bey’s pleadings admit the following consecutive sentences: a 25-year term imposed by the United States District Court in Maryland (1975); a 10 to 30-year term imposed by the District of Columbia Superior Court (1975); and a 5-year term imposed by the United States District Court in Maryland (1977).
. With respect to the traditional venue factors, Chatman-Bey noted: (1) he had been sentenced in the District of Columbia; (2) his personal testimony would not be required; (3) the final administrative decision in his case was made in the District; and (4) all potential witnesses were located in this jurisdiction.
. The transfer order reads:
It appearing to the Court that on the 27th day of April 1983, an order was issued herein directing the plaintiff to Show Cause why the complaint should not be transferred, and the Court having considered the pleadings, plaintiffs response to the order to Show Cause, and it now appearing that no adequate response has been filed, it is by the Court this 20th day of May 1983,
ORDERED that the Clerk of this Court is directed to transfer the above entitled cause to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
Chatman-Bey v. Smith, C.A. No. 83-1140 (D.D.C. May 20, 1983).
. The district court’s statement reads in full:
In this case the rule to show cause as to why the case should not be transferred to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania was issued for the following reasons:
(1) The petitioner is incarcerated in the Middle District of Pennsylvania. Should there be a need to appear he would be readily available to that Court.
(2) The principal defendant is the Warden of the penitentiary where the petitioner is incarcerated, also located in the Middle District of Pennsylvania. He is the defendant who has been making the rules concerning which the petitioner complains. The other three defendants are named simply because of their offiсial position and are unnecessary parties for the relief sought by the petitioner.
(3) It is felt that the Middle District of Pennsylvania is the most appropriate and convenient place to hear complaints against the Warden located there by the petitioner located there.
Chatman-Bey v. Smith, C.A. No. 83-1140 (D.D.C. Aug. 3, 1983).
.
Jones
dealt with a transfer pursuant to Rule 21(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, a criminal analogue to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). The stated criteria for transferring a case under either provision are the same.
See Jones v. Gasch,
. Because Scott’s complaint was based on the FOIA, his forum choice had special significance. The FOIA venue provision “reflects an express congressional design to render the District of Cоlumbia an all-purpose forum in FOIA cases.”
. Chatman-Bey did not challenge the fact or duration of his confinement. Rather, he asked for earlier eligibility for parole consideration. Consequently, he was not
required
to bring his claim as a habeas action.
Cf. Wolff v. McDonnell,
.
See Goode v. Markley,
. Indeed, this circuit has been the forum for all reported cases addressing the issue ChatmanBey raises, even when the complainants were not incarcerated in the District of Columbia.
See Bryant v. Civiletti,
. We note our concern regarding the district court’s failure to address the arguments against transfer Chatman-Bey stated explicitly in his response to the show cause order: “[P]rinciples of fairness suggest that a plaintiff receive some indication that the court considered and for good reason rejected his arguments.”
In re Scott,
